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Galen Strawson

University of Texas at Austin
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    176
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  •  Events
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  •  News and Updates
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 More details
  • University of Texas at Austin
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
University of Oxford
Faculty of Philosophy
DPhil, 1983
APA Central Division
CV
Austin, Texas, United States of America
0000-0003-0899-5906
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Consciousness
The Self
Perception
Metaphysics
Moral Psychology
Hume: Metaphysics and Epistemology
Locke: Identity
Free Will
Narrative Identity
5 more
Areas of Interest
Immanuel Kant
  • All publications (176)
  • The evident connexion: Hume on personal identity
  • Locke on personal identity: consciousness and concernment
  • Cognitive phenomenology : real life
    Cognitive phenomenology starts from something that has been obscured in much recent analytic philosophy: the fact that lived conscious experience isn’t just a matter of sensation or feeling, but is also cognitive in character, through and through. This is obviously true of ordinary human perceptual experience, and cognitive phenomenology is also concerned with something more exclusively cognitive, which we may call propositional meaning-experience, e.g. occurrent experience of linguistic represe…Read more
    Cognitive phenomenology starts from something that has been obscured in much recent analytic philosophy: the fact that lived conscious experience isn’t just a matter of sensation or feeling, but is also cognitive in character, through and through. This is obviously true of ordinary human perceptual experience, and cognitive phenomenology is also concerned with something more exclusively cognitive, which we may call propositional meaning-experience, e.g. occurrent experience of linguistic representations as meaning something, as this occurs in thinking or reading or hearing others speak.
  • Owning the past: reply to Stokes
    Philosophy of Mind
  • The impossibility of moral responsibility
  • What is the relation between an experience, the subject of an experience, and the content of the experience?
  • Real materialism
  • Fundamental singleness: how to turn the 2nd paralogism into a valid argument
  • Radical self-awareness
  • Realistic monism: why physicalism entails panpsychism
  • Against 'corporism': the two uses of 'I'
  • The self
  • Galen Strawson: 5 questions on action
  • Realistic monism: why physicalism entails panpsychism, and on the sesmet theory of subjectivity
  • Selves: an essay in revisionary metaphysics
  • The identity of the categorical and the dispositional
  • Real materialism and other essays
  • Selves
  • Episodic ethics
  • Free agents
  • Reply to commentators, with a celebration of Descartes
  • Realistic monism: why physicalism entails panpsychism
  • Intentionality and experience: terminological preliminaries
  • Introduction
  •  25
    The depth(s) of the twentieth century
  •  15
    Freedom and Commitment: Does Kant Hold a Subjectivist Theory of Freedom?
    Filozofia 81 (3): 277-293. 2026.
  •  3
    Consciousness and Its Place in Nature: Does Physicalism Entail Panpsychism?
    Imprint Academic. 2006.
    For the last five years philosopher Galen Strawson has provoked a mixture of shock and scepticism with his carefully argued case that physicalism (the view that every real, concrete phenomenon in the universe is physical) entails panpsychism (the view that the existence of every real concrete thing involves experiential being). In this book Strawson provides the fullest and most careful statement of his position to date, throwing down the gauntlet to his critics — including Peter Carruthers, Fra…Read more
    For the last five years philosopher Galen Strawson has provoked a mixture of shock and scepticism with his carefully argued case that physicalism (the view that every real, concrete phenomenon in the universe is physical) entails panpsychism (the view that the existence of every real concrete thing involves experiential being). In this book Strawson provides the fullest and most careful statement of his position to date, throwing down the gauntlet to his critics — including Peter Carruthers, Frank Jackson, David Rosenthal and J.J.C. Smart — by inviting them to respond in print. The book concludes with Strawson's response to his commentators. Galen Strawson’s books include Mental Reality, The Self? and Freedom and Belief.
  •  127
    Hier stehe ich
    Defunct Website Flickers of Freedom. 2012.
    This note sets out the sense in which someone who endorses the Basic Argument (G. Strawson) can be said to be a compatibilist, and stresses the natural compatibilist elements in our thinking about free will.
    Moral ResponsibilityTheories of Free Will
  •  778
    There is no mystery of consciousness, and the demand for explanation begs the question
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 33 (1): 57-81. 2026.
    'Consciousness', they say, 'is a mystery'. 'We have no idea what consciousness is.' 'The great intellectual task of our time is to explain the existence of consciousness.' This paper argues that these claims are false. Using 'ψ' to denote consciousness, it argues [1] that we know what ψ is (it's not a mystery); [2] that the idea that we need to explain the existence of ψ begs the question; [3] that ψ is the only thing in concrete reality that we know for certain to exist; [4] that ψ is the only …Read more
    'Consciousness', they say, 'is a mystery'. 'We have no idea what consciousness is.' 'The great intellectual task of our time is to explain the existence of consciousness.' This paper argues that these claims are false. Using 'ψ' to denote consciousness, it argues [1] that we know what ψ is (it's not a mystery); [2] that the idea that we need to explain the existence of ψ begs the question; [3] that ψ is the only thing in concrete reality that we know for certain to exist; [4] that ψ is the only thing in concrete reality whose qualitative nature we know; [5] that in experiencing ψ we know something of the nature of concrete reality as it is in itself; [6] that there is no other case in which we know something of the qualitative nature of concrete reality as it is in itself. It argues further [7] that [1] - [6] are fully compatible with physicalism in the original Vienna-Circle sense of the term; [8] that physicalism is compatible with panpsychism; and [9] that panpsychist physicalism is the most plausible (or if you prefer least implausible) view of the nature of concrete reality.
    Philosophy of Mind
  •  4
    The impossibility of ultimate moral responsibility?
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