This course is a philosophical investigation into the first-person perspective, drawing from phenomenology, analytical philosophy and the sciences.
Recent decades have experienced a true 'consciousness boom'. There has been much talk about how to capture and define consciousness empirically, computationally, functionally.
We all know what 'being me' amounts to, that natural phenomenon leaving one’s dream states and seamlessly finding oneself in the same body. So how is it so complicated to say what subjective consciousness is? And why should other living things not have precisely the same understanding of themselves?
Being the locus of experience requires neither the ability to focus one’s attention on oneself in any way, nor the mental resources to make the condition an explicit topic of reflection.
Another question is that of the relation between the We and the I. How does subjectivity relate to the intersubjectivity of a group experience? And to push it further, are there perhaps forms of subjectivity entirely distinct in their phenomenology to ours? Could we ever find out?
This course is part of the Oxford University Summer School for Adults (OUSSA) programme.