The journal was established in part to provide visibility across disciplines to various researchers approaching the problem of consciousness from their respective fields. The articles are usually in non-specialized language (in contrast to a typical academic journal) in order to make them accessible to those in other disciplines. This also serves to help make them accessible to laypersons.
A review of new journals in Nature stated that 'there is no other journal quite like it, and one day we shall look back to its appearance as a defining moment.' (Gray, 1995).[1]
Content
From time to time, the journal publishes collections of thematically or topically related academic papers. These often take the form of a double issue. Recent issues of the Journal of Consciousness Studies cover topics such as animal consciousness, emotional consciousness, grief, indigenous philosophies of consciousness, and introspection.
Some examples of articles published in the journal:
"The Astonishing Hypothesis" (1994) - Francis Crick & J. Clark
"Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness" (1995) - David Chalmers
"What Forms Could Introspective Systems Take? A Research Programme" (2023) - Francois Kammerer and Keith Frankish.
The journal reports on conferences, notably the Toward a Science of Consciousness (TSC) conference, which is organized by the Center for Consciousness Studies based at the University of Arizona in Tucson. See, for example, TSC 2012.[2]
The Journal of Consciousness Studies is abstracted in the Philosopher's Index, Social Sciences Research Index, ISI Alerting Services (Includes Research Alert), Current Contents, Arts and Humanities Research Index, Social and Behavioural Sciences, Arts & Humanities Citation Index, Social Scisearch and PsycINFO.
References
^Gray, Jeffrey (1995). "The Emperor's New Rag". Nature. 377 (6546): 265. doi:10.1038/377265a0.