Science is, famously and allegedly, 'objective', 'third-personal', dependent on 'intersubjectively available evidence', and so on. But some sciences purport to study phenomena that are, purportedly, first-personal (perceptions, imaginations, hallucinations, emotions, and so on). How, or to what extent, can these sciences grab hold of their subject-matter? What is 'first-personal experience' anyway? Or maybe characterizing their proper subject-matter as 'first-personal experience' is a mistake in the first place? Participants in this workshop will explore these and related questions and issues. The workshop is read-ahead, meaning that authors will give only a very brief summary of their papers, followed by a brief commentary, and then an extended (hour or so) discussion by all participants.
Speakers
Awais Aftab: “An Analysis of Objectivity in the Hierarchical Taxonomy of Psychopathology” Prof. Aftab includes two figures as separate files to preserve the detail.
Riana Betzler: “Skilled Empathy and the Possibility of Understanding Others’ Experiences”
Robyn Bluhm: “The goals of a science of first-person experience”
John D. Dunne: “Studying Distorted Consciousness: Dharmakīrtian Perspectives on the First-Person”
Shaun Gallagher: “Nothing to it: The perceptual zero-point”
Russell Hurlburt: One session of the workshop will be a demonstration and discussion of 'Descriptive Experience Sampling,' a protocol for exploring first-personal experience invented and practiced by Russell Hurlburt.
Agnes: previous DES sessions
Michael: DES sessions