TY - JOUR N2 - In the skeptical tradition self-consciousness was transparent and it served as a basis for expressing doubts and developing arguments leading to certainty. After the linguistic and naturalistic turns, contemporary philosophy developed skeptical arguments against certainty and epistemic priority of the data of self-consciousness (both reflective and pre-reflective). Self-reflection reports on the stream of consciousness ex post, but the reports are meager and dependent on subject’s conceptual scheme, while the pre- -reflective data is unclear. Two contemporary skeptical hypotheses have been developed: H. Putnam’s content externalism hypothesis and so-called Kripkenstein’s quus hypothesis. I put forth the question what kind of self is immune to erroneous misidentification. The immunity seems to be limited to the contentless self, reducible to the pre-discursive feeling of one’s own existence. There is no guarantee that any content whatsoever can be attributed to self without error. I cannot negate that I exist any more than I can negate that something external exists, but any description of either is fallible. So the content of self-consciousness is not in an epistemically better position than the content of external perception. L1 - http://www.czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/116309/PDF/2020-02-PFIL-05-Zieminska.pdf L2 - http://www.czasopisma.pan.pl/Content/116309 PY - 2020 IS - No 2 EP - 102 DO - 10.24425/pfns.2020.133139 KW - pre-reflective self-consciousness KW - minimal self KW - epistemic priority KW - content externalism KW - Kripkenstein’s quus KW - immunity to error through misidentification A1 - Ziemińska, Renata PB - Komitet Nauk Filozoficznych PAN PB - Wydział Filozofii Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego DA - 2020.06.30 T1 - Self-consciousness and skepticism SP - 91 UR - http://www.czasopisma.pan.pl/dlibra/publication/edition/116309 T2 - Przegląd Filozoficzny. Nowa Seria ER -