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"The Conscious Mind" is a book centrally focused on "consciousness", as it argues that consciousness is irreducible to physical facts [1], is classified under the subject of 'Consciousness' [2], posits consciousness as a fundamental fact of nature [3], and profoundly addresses the problem of consciousness [4].

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[PDF] Chalmers, David J. 1996. The Conscious Mind - LSE personal.lse.ac.uk David J. Chalmers · Oxford University Press 1 fact
referenceThe book 'The Conscious Mind' by David J. Chalmers is classified under the subjects 'Philosophy of mind,' 'Consciousness,' and 'Mind and body.'
The Conscious Mind - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org David Chalmers · Oxford University Press 1 fact
claimIn 'The Conscious Mind', David Chalmers argues that the physical world does not exhaust the actual, meaning materialism is false; that consciousness is a fundamental fact of nature; and that science and philosophy should strive to discover a fundamental law of consciousness.
(DOC) The hard problem of consciousness & the phenomenological ... academia.edu Academia.edu 1 fact
perspectiveThe reviewer compares David Chalmers' book 'The Conscious Mind' to Charles Darwin's 'The Origin of Species', noting that while Chalmers' book makes the problem of consciousness profound, the reviewer doubts Chalmers' positive theory of consciousness will be vindicated like Darwin's theory of natural selection.
Panpsychism - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org Wikipedia 1 fact
referenceIn the book 'The Conscious Mind' (1996), David Chalmers concludes that consciousness is irreducible to lower-level physical facts, similar to how fundamental laws of physics are irreducible to lower-level physical facts.