UOW 2021 POSTGRADUATE CONFERENCE: PERSPECTIVES ON INTENTIONALITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS

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UOW 2021 POSTGRADUATE CONFERENCE: PERSPECTIVES ON INTENTIONALITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS
UoW 2021 Postgraduate Conference:
        Perspectives on Intentionality and
                  Consciousness

                        Wednesday, March 24, 2021
08:00 am to 8:10 am                                 Welcome

                       Keynote: Joe Ulatowski- Charity and Intentionality in Twardowski’s
08:10 am to 09:05 am
                                          Critique of Relative Truth

                       Enrico Postiglione- Embodied Intentionality: What an Octopus Tells us
09:10 am to 10:05 am           About the Unity of Consciousness and Hylomorphism

10:05 am to 10:20 am                                  Break

                        Marta Miguel- The Self in Emotions: The Intentionality of So-called
10:20 am to 11:15 am
                                               Reflexive Emotions

11:20 am to 12:15 am          Lorenzo Buscicchi- Hedonic Intentionalism: A Critique
12:15 am to 12:30 am                                  Break

12:30 am to 13:25 pm     Ray Cheung- Phenomenality: Indication Without Representation

                          Thursday, March 25, 2021
08:00 am to 08:55 am
                          Sevgi Demiroğl- Reclaiming Pain’s Intentionality After a Century

09:00 am to 09:55 am              Cristiano Vidali- Pay attention to Intentionality!

09:55 am to 10:10 am                                   Break

10:10 am to 11:05 am Andrea Gianotta- Embodying and Naturalizing Phenomenal Intentionality

                          Christopher Stratman- Phenomenal Intentionality and Imaginative
11:10 am to 12:05 am
                                                     Presence

12:05 am to 12:20 am                                   Break

12:20 am to 13:15 pm       Tristan James Heine- Kant, McDowell & the Myth of the Given

                            Friday, March 26, 2021
                     Bruno Cortesi- The Early Husserl and Merleau-Ponty on Intentionality: A
08:00 am to 08:55 am       Brief Review of Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Account of Our
                                 Pre-reflective Encounter With the Environment

09:00 am to 09:55 am               Keynote: Imogen Dickie- Mind Seeks World

09:55 am to 10:10                                      Break

10:10 am to 11:05         Maria Corrado- The Objects of Auditory Perceptual Experience
11:10 am to 12:05 am                Thomas Froy-What Are Abstract Thoughts Not About?

12:05 am to 12:20 am                                       Break

12:20 am to 13:15 pm                     Benjamin D. Young- Thinking About The Past

13:15 pm to 13: 25
                                                          Closure
pm

Joe Ulatowski- Charity and Intentionality in Twardowski’s Critique of
Relative Truth
On Brentano’s notion of intentionality the characteristic mark of mental phenomenon is its having
an object. Accordingly, so do judgements. Impersonal judgments like “It is raining” lack any
subject term in the usual sense. What Brentano thought was essential for impersonal judgments to
be true involved the acceptance or rejection of something by someone. This allows for impersonal
judgments to be relatively true and false since “It is raining” may be true at one time and place but
not at another. Kazimierz Twardowski, a student of Brentano, argued for an absolute concept of
truth. On Twardowski’s view judgments were the bearers of truth, so he dispenses with Brentano’s
overly psychologised truth-concept. To supplement Twardowski’s absolute conception of truth he
put some purchase in the speaker’s intentions and speaker meaning. In this paper, I show that an
integral but often overlooked part of Twardowski’s absolute view of truth and his critique of
relative truth is the principle of charity.

Enrico Postiglione- Embodied Intentionality: What an Octopus Tells us About
the Unity of Consciousness and Hylomorphism
This paper explores the possibility of consciousness in animals with radically different neural
structures, in the hope of gaining insight into the nature of human intentionality and consciousness.
It results form the observation of Octopus vulgaris in the wild and/or housed in enriched
environment, and investigates their behavioural responses to problem-solving and play-like tests.
Integrating philosophical and neuro-ethological remarks and analysing some properties of the
Octopus - which in certain circumstances seems to produce a cognitive-laden response, with no
involvement of the brain - I infer that, like a body that is its own controller, Octopus represents a
perfect case-study for hylomorphism, ruling out other theories. Indeed, the metaphysical structure
and physiological organisation of an octopus put pressure on many contemporary views about both
intentionality and the unity of consciousness. If an octopus has mental states, some of them must
be embodied somehow. If they are intentional, its intentionality must be embodied as well. Hence,
consciousness of different kinds may be distributed through the phylogenetic tree. I try to argue in
favour of this possibility and highlight how it could inform our conception of human consciousness
in many surprising ways.

Marta Miguel- The Self in Emotions: The Intentionality of So-called Reflexive
Emotions
The present work deals with the problem of reflexivity in emotional experience, more precisely,
with the distinction that many philosophers have traced between reflexive and non-reflexive
emotions. According to this distinction, the main difference between the emotions of shame, pride,
guilt and embarrassment, and the rest of our emotions – such as fear, anger, sadness, joy or
gratitude – is that the former are necessarily directed at the self as the intentional object of the
experience, while the latter are directed at objects, people, states of affairs and events in the world
other than the self (Helm 2001, Zinck 2008, Deonna and Teroni 2012, Teroni 2016 and Tietjen
2020). In this paper, I wish to provide some reasons that may hopefully show that such contrast
constitutes an important mischaracterisation of both our so-called reflexive and non-reflexive
emotions. I will be defending the idea that the reflexive/non-reflexive distinction construes the
emotions of shame, guilt, pride and embarrassment under a narcissistic reconfiguration that
contrasts with the fundamental configuration of these emotions. Attention to the criteria that help
individuate what an emotion is about – what its intentional object is – show that shame, pride, guilt
and embarrassment are normatively directed at objects in the world other than the self and that
when this is not the case, what we have is the degraded or narcissistic version of such emotions. If
these ideas are plausible, it seems that we would have to revise whether the reflexive/non-reflexive
distinction, as described above, makes sense after all.
Lorenzo Buscicchi- Hedonic Intentionalism: A Critique
What is pleasure? Has pleasure a characteristic phenomenology? Has it an intentionality? In
response to these questions, philosophical understandings of pleasure can be grouped in two
classes. Phenomenalism holds pleasure to correspond to a distinct feeling (or hedonic tone).
Intentionalism holds pleasure to be an attitude. Hedonic Intentionalism is sometimes considered
the leading view among contemporary accounts of pleasure. In my presentation, I advance some
doubts concerning Hedonic Intentionalism by addressing some prominent theories: Chris
Heathwood’s Motivational Theory of pleasure and Fred Feldman’s Attitudinal Theory of pleasure.
By doing so, I advance that the heterogeneity problem—the claim that pleasures appear very
different one from the other and we cannot therefore identify only one thing as “pleasure”—might
not be a genuine issue. This is important because Hedonic Intentionalism descends from the
heterogeneity problem because it was developed to solve it and is sometimes considered a viable
solution to it.

Ray Cheung- Phenomenality: Indication Without Representation

A mental state is possibly phenomenally conscious without being access conscious. Consider a
meditative state in which one has a reflexive awareness without any conscious thoughts. Perceptual
knowledge has intentionality, and is about the object of perception, but experience need not. Some
experience covaries with some states of affairs, without such relation being intentional because
not epistemic. The number of tree rings track the cycles of seasons the tree has survived, without
such tracking constituting an intentional relation. The evidence of the tree rings, upon epistemic
agent’s understanding, justifies knowledge of the age of the tree. The tree, with the number of tree
rings that instantiates on it, does not by itself constitute an informational state. It is the evidence
that encodes the information, and it is in virtue of understanding the evidence correctly that one
comes to process the information correctly. The indicative relation between the tree rings and its
age to the experiential in the following way with fittingness. It is fitting that one be angry upon
injustice, without the anger being intentional; thoughts through the anger are. Phenomenality is
thus prior to intentionality with regard to mentality. Interpretation of experience constitutes
intentional states.
Sevgi Demiroğl- Reclaiming Pain’s Intentionality After a Century
The International Association for the Study of Pain defines pain as "an unpleasant sensory and
emotional experience” (IASP 2019). Considering the subjective value of the emotional content,
clinical studies emphasise self-reports and researchers conduct experiments on changing the way
pain feels with the help of experiences that are felt pleasant. Yet, what is unpleasant in/of pain? Is
it what pain feels like as a sensation and it gets diverted with another? Is it a referential content of
pain that differs with an appraisal of a represented bodily damage? Especially in the cases of pain
asymbolia, there are reports of sensing but not minding pain, which raises the question of whether
pain as felt sensation and as intentional feeling can exist separately as “an unpleasant sensory”
and/or “emotional experience”. Taking experimental studies on healthy individuals and the
strongest debates in the contemporary philosophy of pain into its interdisciplinary approach, the
present paper examines unpleasantness as an inseparable emotional character of pain which may
give pain its intentional status Brentano found deserved a century ago. The paper then puts forward
the objects of this intentionality as necessary elements for the study of pain both in clinics and in
theory.

Cristiano Vidali- Pay attention to Intentionality!
Phenomenology is one of the traditions that, more than any other, has emphasized the importance
of intentionality. It has been rarely noticed that, in his early works, while Edmund Husserl outlines
the phenomenological method and illustrates the meaning of “intentionality”, he repeatedly
focuses on attention (Manuscripts 1898 in Hua XXXVIII §20-23, §28; Course in 1904-05; Ideen
I 1911 §37, §92).Whereas attention has become a usual theme for psychology, starting with
theoretical considerations (Ribot 1889; James 1890) up to ever more empirical researches
(Broadbent 1958; Kahenman 1973; Treisman et al. 1980), the slippery notion of intentionality has
been seen by cognitive sciences with suspicion. Our aim will be to contrast intentionality and
attention by considering both classic phenomenologists who have questioned the latter in dialogue
with psychology (Merleau-Ponty 1945; Gurwitsch 1964, 1966) and more recent ones working
between cognitive sciences and neurophenomenology (Arvidson 2006; Depraz 2014; Wu 2014).
The emerging differences will enable us to clarify the structures of intentionality and attention
respectively and to understand the insufficiency of the second in the absence of the first. This will
justify why intentionality should be taken into account by the cognitive sciences, providing a
concrete example of the contribution of phenomenology to scientific research.

Andrea Giannotta- Embodying and Naturalizing Phenomenal Intentionality
Proponents of the “phenomenal intentionality theory” (PIT) motivate it by appealing to internalist
arguments such as the “brain in a vat” and the “disembodied mind” hypotheses. However, this
leads us to raise sceptical issues concerning the role of the body in cognition and the existence of
the external world. In order to address these problems, I propose to investigate the temporal
structure of phenomenal intentionality. The investigation of the “macro-temporal” structure of
experience comes into play in those developments of PIT that conceive of phenomenal intentional
states as constructing or constituting objects (Farkas, Masrour), but this still leads us to raise the
problem of the external world. In order to solve it, we must investigate the “micro-temporal”
structure of the experiences that underlie the constituting process. This analysis shows that the
process of constituting objects is, at the same time, the process through which phenomenal
intentional states themselves are generated. Then, I combine PIT with a neutral monist
metaphysics, which admits at the core of experience a stream of qualities that are neutral to the
distinction between subjective and objective, underlying their reciprocal constitution. This
development of PIT allows us to embody and naturalize phenomenal intentionality.

Christopher Stratman- Phenomenal Intentionality and Imaginative Presence
Standard versions of the Phenomenal Intentionality Theory (PIT) claim that all genuine intentional
mental states are either identical to, or are partly grounded in phenomenal intentional mental states.
An adequate version of PIT must be able to give an adequate account of problem cases. The goal
of this paper is to explore cases of what Kind (2018) calls "imaginative presence" in order to
develop a novel challenge to PIT. In cases of imaginative presence, the content of what is
imaginatively perceived in a single experience E outstrips the content of what is immediately
perceived in E. Consider a case where in E a subject visually perceives a cup on the edge of the
table and imagines it falling, such that E has both the immediately perceived content  and the imaginatively perceived content . In such a case, the imaginatively
perceived content outstrips the content of what is immediately perceived. But PIT falsely predicts
that this cannot happen. If this is correct, then PIT fails to give an adequate explanation of cases
involving imaginative presence, which suffices to show that standard versions of PIT are
empirically inadequate and should be rejected.

Tristan James Heine- Kant, McDowell & the Myth of the Given

In Mind and World (1994), McDowell argues that the theory of cognition Kant presents in the
Critique of Pure Reason (1781/87) provides us with the essential ingredients required to avoid the
‘Myth of the Given’, the idea that our thoughts or concepts ultimately have their source in
something that is fundamentally non-conceptual, sense-impressions or impacts from the world that
lie beyond the mind’s own acts of spontaneity. McDowell takes Kant’s claim that ‘intuitions are
blind without concepts’ to be his key insight but argues that this insight is ruined by his
‘transcendental story’, which posits there to be a supersensible world lying beyond the everyday
empirical world. Like others before him, McDowell recommends excising this element of Kant’s
theory. In this paper, I argue that it is not possible to do so without undermining Kant’s theory and
losing what is most interesting about the account he gives of the relationship between
consciousness and the world. Accordingly, I present an interpretation of Kant that avoids the Myth
of the Given whilst retaining the transcendental elements of his theory.

Bruno Cortesi- The Early Husserl and Merleau-Ponty on Intentionality: A
Brief Review of Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Account of Our Pre-reflective
Encounter With the Environment
Brentano described intentionality as reference to or direction towards an object, or topic, or
content, those terms being implied in the broadest possible sense – i.e. as anything that could be
thought of –. He also characterized mental events as real events occurring within the psychic
domain and necessarily containing an object within themselves. Ever since he (re-)introduced the
notion of intentionality within the philosophical debate, it has been interpreted either as the
property mental states exhibit of ’being directed towards something’ – possibly different from
themselves – or as their being of or about some object. Those two metaphors have often been seen
as referring to the same range of phenomena. My main aim, though, is to argue that the alleged
equivalence between ’directedness’ and ’about-ness’ should be rejected, as I believe it is indeed
somehow mis-guided. I will address this issue mainly from an historical perspective. More
specifically, I shall consider the early Husserl’s and Merleau-Ponty’s respective conceptions of
intentionality, in order to establish three main points: (a) That Merleau-Ponty seems to allow for
the possibility of there being intentional states that are directed without therefore being about
anything specific. (b) That the influence Gestalt Psychology had upon Merleau-Ponty’s thought
overall, and in particular his rejection of the separation between matter and form, led him to
significantly depart in many respects from Husserl’s – and Kant’s transcendental/constitutive
model of intentionality. (c) That Merleau-Ponty’s account pays a debt towards the husserlian
notion of The Lifeworld (Lebenswelt) and the distinction made by Husserl in the late phase of his
thought, between act-intentionality and operative-intentionality ((fungierende intentionalität).

Imogen Dickie- Mind Seeks World
I’ll argue that part of the aim of ordinary cognitive activity is to reach out with the ghostly hand of
the mind and seize subject-matter for thought; use this conclusion to develop foundations for an
account of intentionality; and indicate some applications.

Maria Corrado- The Objects of Auditory Perceptual Experience
The literature in auditory perceptual experience has been considering whether the objects of
auditory perceptual experience are just sounds or whether they can also be ordinary material things
other than sounds, such as the dog barking or the phone ringing. Some have argued that the only
objects of auditory perceptual experience are sounds and that we hear material things other than
sounds only indirectly via an association or an inference made on the basis of the sounds that we
hear. Opponents to this thesis have attempted to show that ordinary material things are the direct
objects of auditory perceptual experience by focusing on the ontological nature of sounds. For
instance, by arguing that sounds are nothing other than events involving material things, some
have argued that the direct objects of auditory perceptual experience are themselves material
things. In order to understand what the objects of auditory perceptual experience are, the debate
has thereafter revolved around what the correct account of the nature of sounds is. In my paper I
propose a different approach to defend the thesis that material things are the direct objects of
auditory perceptual experience. I present a positive argument for the thesis that auditory perceptual
experience presents a subject with material things by exploiting the notion of force. I argue that
we are auditorily aware of material things insofar as we are auditorily aware of episodes involving
the operation of force and insofar as the operation of force is a mark of material things.
Thomas Froy- What Are Abstract Thoughts Not About?
Tell me: what am I thinking about? I don’t bet you can’t tell me what I’m not thinking about, no?
This presentation will ask what abstract thinking is not about according to Martin Buber. Buber’s
place in twentieth century philosophy is currently undergoing something of a re-evaluation, with
a particular focus on his political thought (Breslauer 2017, Löwy 2017, Brody 2019); his critique
of Martin Heidegger’s conception has, until now, received little scholarly attention. Anticipating
with extraordinary precision the post-Heideggerian critiques which would soon take shape in
Emmanuel Levinas and Hannah Arendt among others, Buber argues that Heidegger’s conception
of intersubjectivity is fundamentally impoverished and ‘lonely’ (Buber 2014). Heidegger –
somewhat ironically – begins with a critique of ‘abstract’ thinking which fails to think about who
we are; notably, Heidegger blames a certain ‘Pharisaism’. Buber, in turn, charges that Heidegger’s
call to think about ‘us’ leads to thinking about ‘I’: thus, we return to abstract thought and fail –
once again – to think, concrete about you and me. Buber’s abstract thinking, then, is not about my
relationship with you, my obligations to you, and the work we do together.

Benjamin D. Young- Thinking About The Past
Many mental states are intentional, they are about something, an intentional object. For example,
if I have a thought about a (temporally) present object, ‘Jacinda Ardern’, then the intentional
object is obvious, Jacinda Ardern. But, many mental states seem to be about objects that are not
present and so it is not obvious what the intentional objects of such thoughts could be. For
example, the intentional object of a thought about ‘Sherlock Holmes’ or ‘Julius Caesar’ is not
obvious. Thus, a question arises. What is the intentional object of a thought about a non-present
object? If the past is nonexistent, then is the intentional object of a thought about ‘Julius Caesar’
no more substantial than the intentional object of a thought about ‘Sherlock Holmes’? If the past
is as nonexistent as a fictional character, then a thought about the past and a thought about a
fictional character both involve the same kinds of objects, nonexistent. But, if a thought about the
past involves something no more real than Sherlock Holmes, then is the past no more real than
fiction?
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