Abstract
When you and I share an experience, each of us lives through a we-experience. The paper claims that we-experiences have unique phenomenality and structure. First, we-experiences’ phenomenality is characterised by the fact that they feel like ours to their subject. This specific phenomenality is contended to derive from the way these experiences self-represent: a we-experience exemplifies us-ness or togetherness because it self-represents as mine qua ours. Second, living through a we-experience together with somebody else is not to have this experience in parallel with the experience of the other. Rather, the paper argues that a we-experience is partly co-constituted by the experience of the other. After offering an account of the phenomenality and constitution of we-experiences, which traces these two elements back to the subject’s self-understanding as a group member, the paper argues for the claim that an experience’s for-us-ness is committal to this experience being co-constituted by another we-experience.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 195-205 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Journal | Topoi |
| Volume | 41 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Feb 2022 |
Keywords
- Constitution
- Phenomenal consciousness
- Self-representation
- Subjective character
- We-experience
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