- Additional Authors
- EBSCOhost
- Description
- 1 online resource.
- Subject
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Reproduction (note)
- Source of Description (note)
- Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 14, 2022).
- Contents
- Cover -- Perceptual Experience -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- List of Figures -- Epigraph -- 1: Representationalism -- I. Introduction -- II. Goals -- III. Fixing Ideas about Perception and Experience -- IV. Teleosemantics Plus Representational Pluralism -- V. Selectionist Teleosemantics, Learning, and Cummins Teleosemantics -- VI. Two Objections to the Foregoing Picture -- VII. Conclusion -- 2: Appearance and Reality I -- I. Introduction -- II. Introspective Grounds for Perceptual Relativity -- III. Experimental Grounds for Relativity
- IV. Appearance Properties -- V. Thouless Sizes -- VI. More on Thouless Properties -- VII. Objective Properties -- VIII. Conclusion -- 3: Appearance and Reality II -- I. Introduction -- II. Alternative Accounts of Visual Appearances -- III. Aspects of Perceptual Relativity Due to Peripheral Sense Organs -- IV. Aspects of Perceptual Relativity Due to Attention -- V. Thouless Properties and Causal Theories of Representation -- VI. Generalizing from Vision to Other Perceptual Modalities -- VII. Appearance and Reality in Audition -- VIII. Appearance and Reality in Touch
- IX. Appearance and Reality in Olfaction -- X. Conclusion -- 4: Perceptual Awareness of Particulars -- I. Introduction -- II. Particularism vs Existentialism -- III. An Argument for Existentialism -- IV. Arguments for Particularism -- V. Awareness of Particulars -- VI. The Nature of Objects of Perceptual Awareness -- VII. A Dual Systems Account of Object Awareness -- VIII. A Unified Account of Object Awareness -- IX. Awareness of Objects Qua Members of Kinds -- X. Conclusion -- 5: Perceptual Phenomenology -- I. Introduction -- II. Dualism -- III. Phenomenal Representationalism
- IV. Reasons for Representationalist Accounts of Awareness -- V. An Objection to Phenomenal Representationalism -- VI. Conclusion -- APPENDIX I: The Phenomenology of Conscious Thought -- APPENDIX II: The Phenomenology of Moods and Emotions -- 6: A Quasi-Perceptualist Account of Pain Experience -- I. Introduction -- II. Fixing Ideas -- III. The Damage Detection System and Its Relation to Pain -- IV. Six Concerns about This Theory of Pain -- V. Hurting -- VI. Awareness of Pain and Perceptual Awareness -- VII. Conclusion -- 7: Perceptual Consciousness -- I. Introduction -- II. The Autonomy Thesis
- III. A Metaphysical Argument for the Autonomy Thesis -- IV. A Fourth Argument for Autonomy -- V. The Categorical Base Hypothesis -- VI. Phenomenal Consciousness -- VII. Proposals about P-Consciousness -- VIII. The Second-OrderTheory of P-Consciousness -- IX. The Adverbial Theory of P-Consciousness -- X. The Categorical Base Theory of P-Consciousness -- XI. Conclusion -- 8: Percepts and Concepts -- I. Introduction -- II. A Theory of Propositional Attitudes -- III. Percepts are Metaphysically Independent of Concepts
- ISBN
- 9780191959868
- 0191959863
- 9780192693624
- 019269362X
- OCLC
- om2146768566
- Author
Hill, Christopher S., author.
- Title
Perceptual experience / Christopher S. Hill.
- Publisher
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2022.
- Edition
First edition.
- Type of Content
text
- Type of Medium
computer
- Type of Carrier
online resource
- Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Ipswich, MA Available via World Wide Web.
- Note
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 14, 2022).
- Connect to:
- Added Author
EBSCOhost
- Other Form:
Print version: Hill, Christopher S. Perceptual Experience Oxford : Oxford University Press, Incorporated,c2022 9780192867766