Abstract
The 1990’s, we’ve been told, were the decade of the brain. But without anyone
announcing or declaring, much less deciding that it should be so, the 90’s were
also a breakthrough decade for the study of consciousness. (Of course we think
the two are related, but that is another matter altogether.) William G. Lycan leads
the charge with his 1987 book Consciousness (MIT Press), and he has weighed-in
again with Consciousness and Experience (1996, MIT Press). Together these two
books put forth Lycan’s formidable view of consciousness, extending the theory
of mind that he calls ‘homuncular functionalism.’ Roughly, Lycan’s view is that
conscious beings are hierarchically composed intentional systems, whose representational
powers are to be understood in terms of their biological function. In this
review we will call the view ‘teleological functionalism’ or ‘teleofunctionalism’ –
the homuncular part, for which Lycan and Daniel Dennett argued convincingly, is
now so widely accepted that it fails to distinguish Lycan’s view from other versions
of functionalism. This, by itself, is a testament to the importance of Lycan’s work.