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related 0.50 — strongly supporting 5 facts

The mind and subjective experience are intrinsically linked through the 'Hard Problem of Consciousness,' which examines how physical brain processes generate both [1]. Philosophical discourse often treats them as a unified subject of inquiry regarding human consciousness [2], with frameworks like the dual-aspect-dual-mode model attempting to bridge the gap between them and their neural correlates [3].

Facts (5)

Sources
Consciousness and Self-Directed Attention - Springer Nature link.springer.com Springer 2 facts
claimThe mission underlying philosophical quests regarding the mind and subjective experience has been to understand the nature of human consciousness.
claimSome philosophers have viewed subjective experience and the mind as separate from physical reality, while others have considered them extensions of physical reality.
Hard Problem of Consciousness - David Chalmers - organism.earth organism.earth Organism.earth 1 fact
claimThe “Hard Problem of Consciousness” is defined as the problem of how physical processes in the brain give rise to the subjective experience of the mind and of the world.
(PDF) On the function of consciousness - an adaptationist perspective academia.edu Academia.edu 1 fact
claimThe dual-aspect-dual-mode framework of consciousness leads to structural and functional coherence between the mind and the brain, bridges the explanatory gap between subjective experiences and their neural correlates, and results in mundane subjective experiences.
The Hard Problem of Consciousness | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com Springer 1 fact
claimThere is no direct evidence or logical proof of the existence of the physical realm beyond subjective experience without making additional metaphysical assumptions about the nature of mind and matter.