Consciousness Reconsidered
Owen Flanagan (Bradford Books: March 1994)
Consciousness is neither miraculous nor ultimately mysterious. Owen Flanagan argues that we are on the way to understanding consciousness as an aspect of the natural order. Self-consciousness, autobiographical memory, perceptions, sensations, the stream of consciousness, disorders such as blindsight, various kinds of amnesia, and multiple personalities all find a place in his theory that contends that consciousness is real, plays an important causal role, and resides in the brain.
Books & Bibliography + Philosophy of Mind



