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Philosophical Inquiries è una rivista filosofica italiana pubblicata in inglese. La rivista è dedicata all'esplorazione di un'ampia gamma di questioni filosofiche in diversi campi. Questi includono etica, estetica, logica, metafisica, epistemologia, filosofia della mente, filosofia del linguaggio, filosofia della scienza e filosofia del diritto. La rivista si propone di riunire studiosi internazionali impegnati in ricerche all'avanguardia, che affrontano questioni urgenti all'interno di queste discipline. I membri del team editoriale, del comitato esecutivo e del comitato consultivo della rivista non aderiscono a un'unica “scuola” di pensiero, né privilegiano alcuno stile filosofico specifico.

Al centro della missione della rivista c'è la convinzione che la scrittura filosofica debba essere chiara, precisa e rigorosamente argomentata, favorendo il progresso razionale nei dibattiti contemporanei. Pur accogliendo approcci innovativi e prospettive nuove, sottolineiamo l'importanza di una comunicazione scientifica efficace. I contributi devono evitare l'eccessivo ricorso a un gergo specialistico che potrebbe risultare inaccessibile agli studiosi al di fuori di specifici sottocampi. Allo stesso modo, sono scoraggiati i contributi incentrati esclusivamente su questioni interne a una particolare tradizione o autore, a meno che non contribuiscano a discussioni filosofiche più ampie.
Le analisi storiche e filologiche sono benvenute nella misura in cui fanno luce - concettualmente o genealogicamente - su questioni rilevanti per gli attuali dibattiti filosofici.

Indicizzata in: Scopus, Philosopher's Index, Fascia A Anvur (11/C1, C2, C3, C4, C5).

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Pre-reflective Self-consciousness: Exploring the Intersection of Phenomenology and Cognitive Sciences

2026-01-08

If I am asked to describe the sensation of an itch that I am feeling on my hand, I will answer by reflecting on it. Adopting this reflective stance enables me to create a distance between myself and the sensation of itchiness, thereby making it an object of conscious awareness. Since its inception, phenomenology has emphasized a pre-reflective dimension of self-consciousness that is fundamental to the capacity to reflect on one's own experience (Husserl 1959; Sartre 1956; Ingarden 1992; Merleau-Ponty 2012). Recently, a cross-disciplinary discussion has emerged surrounding the topic of pre-reflective self-consciousness, which is located at the  intersection of continental and analytic phenomenology (Miguens, Preyer & Morando 2015; Schlicht 2018; Gärtner 2023) and cognitive science, where predictive-processing frameworks have been applied to perception, bodily selfhood, and affective/interoceptive experience (Hohwy 2013; Seth 2013; Limanowski & Blankenburg 2013). The impetus for this debate stems from the growing reliance on the concept of pre-reflective self-consciousness in various fields of applied research and innovation, including psychiatry and psychopathology (Cermolacce, Naudin & Parnas 2007; Neustadter, Fotopoulou, Steinfeld & Fineberg 2021), developmental psychology, and robotics (Ciaunica & Crucianelli 2019; Forch & Hamker 2021; Esaki et al. 2024; Yoshida, Masumori & Ikegami 2025).

One of the most challenging aspects of pre-reflective self-consciousness concerns its first-personal status. Non-egological theories, primarily associated with the Heidelberg school, suggest that pre-reflective self-awareness is "anonymous." This means that it encompasses awareness of experience but not of a subject that lives it (Frank 2022). In contrast, proponents of egological accounts, such as Dan Zahavi, argue that lived experiences are not structured in an anonymous field but are always given to someone (Zahavi 1999, 2005, 2014). They exhibit a distinctive first-personal character commonly referred to as "for-me-ness" (Zahavi & Kriegel 2015), "minimal" or "core" self (Gallagher 2000, 2023). The recent prominence of predictive-processing frameworks has brought this tension into sharper focus. As several authors have noted, predictive approaches generally describe first-person phenomena in terms of internal representational or inferential states, shifting the emphasis from the personal to the sub-personal level (Schlicht 2018; Colombo & Fabry 2020). In their more recent embodied and embedded formulations (see Venter 2021), predictive models tend to characterize self-consciousness primarily in functional and regulatory terms, as grounded in processes of self-organization, adaptive control, and the maintenance of organismic viability.

In this special issue, we aim to explore the foundations of pre-reflective self-consciousness beyond the compartmentalization, fragmentation, and insulation that currently separate phenomenological and cognitive-scientific approaches. Our objective is to foster intersections that reconfigure the landscape of the debate and open new avenues for understanding this fundamental dimension of consciousness.

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V. 13 N. 1 (2025)
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