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Sentientism, Motivation, and Philosophical Vulcans

Luke Roelofs

2022Pacific philosophical quarterly58 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract If moral status depends on the capacity for consciousness, what kind of consciousness matters exactly? Two popular answers are that any kind of consciousness matters (Broad Sentientism), and that what matters is the capacity for pleasure and suffering (Narrow Sentientism). I argue that the broad answer is too broad, while the narrow answer is likely too narrow, as Chalmers has recently argued by appeal to ‘philosophical Vulcans’. I defend a middle position, Motivational Sentientism, on which what matters is motivating consciousness: any kind of consciousness which presents its subject with reasons for action.

Topics & Concepts

ConsciousnessAppealPleasureSubject (documents)Action (physics)EpistemologyPhilosophyPosition (finance)PsychologySociologyLawPolitical scienceComputer scienceQuantum mechanicsEconomicsNeuroscienceFinancePhysicsLibrary sciencePsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentFree Will and AgencyPhilosophical Ethics and Theory
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