ABSTRACT

Identity, supervenience-based reduction and non-reduction, and emergence are ontological options for conscious properties alive in the contemporary philosophical debates about consciousness. In this chapter, four substantive philosophical arguments for and against these options are entertained and rejected. These four argument types represent some of the most influential efforts by philosophers to fix the limits of debate about conscious properties. They use either considerations about the nature of the language used to talk about conscious properties or considerations about the logic of certain proposed relations between them and the brain’s activity to buttress certain positions. Showing that these arguments are unsound clears the ground early and forestalls misleading appeals to them later. That in turn warrants a different kind of philosophizing about conscious properties, one informed as much by scientific discovery as by a priori argumentation.