Relations (1)

related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Consciousness and naturalism are linked through the philosophical challenge of explaining how consciousness arises from physical matter [1], as well as their integration into frameworks like David Chalmers's hard problem [2] and theories viewing humans as biological computers [3]. Furthermore, the relationship is explicitly explored in academic literature such as Jonardon Ganeri's book on the subject [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Self-Consciousness - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
referenceJonardon Ganeri authored the book 'The Self: Consciousness, Naturalism, and the First-Person Stance', published by Oxford University Press in 2012.
Six Theories of Consciousness - Mind Matters mindmatters.ai Mind Matters 1 fact
claimThe author of the Mind Matters article asserts that the first four theories of consciousness presented are based on naturalism and assume that humans are biological computers interacting with the world.
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2015 Edition) plato.stanford.edu William Seager, Sean Allen-Hermanson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
claimThe key difficulty in the philosophy of consciousness is explaining the generation of consciousness by 'mere matter' in naturalistic terms.
The Hard Problem of Consciousness | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com Springer 1 fact
claimDavid Chalmers's definition of the hard problem of consciousness presupposes five hypotheses: (A) Consciousness (Q) exists, (B) The physical (P) exists, (C) Naturalism counts, or Q and P are naturally and lawfully correlated, (D) Q is not reducible to P, and (E) P is not reducible to Q.