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This book draws the limits of our thoughts and consciousness between the mind and mind-independent reality by using mathematical logic with the support of neurology. Diagnosing the limits between immanence and transcendence of the consciousness depends on dening some transcendental a priori categories in between as some basic axioms of the mind. Although this is a paradoxical attempt every philosopher falls into, the author non-paradoxically identies these non-intentional cognitive categories by using mathematical category theory. e author denes the intentional categories of consciousness by…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book draws the limits of our thoughts and consciousness between the mind and
mind-independent reality by using mathematical logic with the support of neurology.
Diagnosing the limits between immanence and transcendence of the consciousness
depends on dening some transcendental a priori categories in between as some
basic axioms of the mind. Although this is a paradoxical attempt every philosopher
falls into, the author non-paradoxically identies these non-intentional cognitive
categories by using mathematical category theory. e author denes the intentional
categories of consciousness by using mathematical set theory and obtains a selfrepresentational
higher-order theory of consciousness (SHOT). Finally, he combines
the intentional and non-intentional categories with an algebraic topography and
obtains a model of the mind.
Autorenporträt
Meric Bilgic is a philosopher who comes from the Husserlian and Kantian tradition of the philosophical circles of Leuven/Belgium and Istanbul/Turkey. He worked in all major branches of philosophy, and he still teaches. He works on a universalizable Cartesian ground for science and philosophy by synthesizing the analytic and continental traditions in philosophy of mind. He is the owner of a philosophical theory called ¿Anthropogoniä in the eld of philosophical anthropology.