Gertie wrote: ↑May 26th, 2020, 4:06 pmSo, back to whether you need an Experiencer to experience.
If you are simply defining the substrate as the Experiencer of the experiential states, then (Idealism aside) yeah you can say that.
But it seems like a thin definition which misses the point that a sense of being a discrete, unified Self, the sense of being an Experiencer, is a feature of the nature of experience (as it manifests in humans at least).
What about pathological distortions of self-awareness/self-consciousness? For example, the sense of being a "unified self" can get lost (dissociative identity disorder); and Foster seems to be wrong in stating that "the subject’s awareness of himself, and of his role as mental subject, is an essential element of his awareness of the item itself," and that "someone’s introspective awareness of a mental item includes the awareness of himself as its subject." For there are pathological states of mind where one is aware or conscious of a mental item without a sense of ownership ("mineness") and subjecthood. Thought insertion is an example, where schizophrenics don't innerly perceive their thoughts as their own ones.
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"When someone is introspectively aware of a mental item, he is not aware of it as an object presented to him. He is aware of it, more intimately, from the inside, as an instance of his own mentalizing—as an instance of his being in a certain mental state, or performing a certain kind of mental act, or engaging in a certain kind of mental activity. The subject’s awareness of himself, and of his role as mental subject, is an essential element of his awareness of the item itself.
There should be no issue, then, over the need for an ontology of mental subjects. One has only to focus on the nature of any type of mental item as our concept of that type reveals it—be it pain, visual experience, belief, decision making, desire, anger, or whatever—to be able to see quite plainly that that sort of thing can be realized only as an instance of mentalizing by a subject. And one has only to think about introspective awareness in the right way to see quite plainly that someone’s introspective awareness of a mental item includes the awareness of himself as its subject."
(Foster, John. "Subjects of Mentality." In
After Physicalism, edited by Benedikt Paul Göcke, 72-103. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2012. pp. 72-4)
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