Perception and idealism: an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford ; New York
Oxford University Press
2022
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Ausgabe: | First edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xi, 234 Seiten Illustrationen 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9780192845566 |
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adam_text | Contents 1 1 2 3 4 Introduction 1 The Aim of This Book 2 Part I: Chapter by Chapter 3 Part II: Its Rationale through the Chapters 4 The Nature of Sense-Data PART I: HOW THE WORLD MANIFESTS ITSELF TO US 1. The Causal Argument for Sense-data, ‘Philosophers’ Hallucinations’, and the Disjunctive Response 1.1 Philosophers’Hallucination: Introductory Remarks 1.2 Preliminary Thoughts on the Role of Causation in Perception 1.3 Philosophers’Hallucinations: The Argument 1.4 Strategies for Opposing the Causal-Hallucinatory Argument 1.5 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination: Introductory Remarks 1.6 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination; (i) Martin’s Tndiscriminability’ Account 1.7 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination; (ii) Fish’s ‘Belief’ Account 1.8 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination; (iii) Soteriou and ‘Seeming to Experience’ 1.9 Naïve Realism and Philosophers’ Hallucinations: Conclusion 11 11 12 14 17 22 22 26 28 30 2. Naïve Realism and the Argument from Illusion 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Disjunctivism and Illusion 2.3 French and Phillips’ ‘Austere’ Naïve Realism, and Why It Is Not as Austere as They Hope 2.4 Brewer, Campbell, and Perspectivalism 2.5 The Perspectivalism of Fish and Kalderon 2.6 Genone and the Doxastic Theory 2.7 Conclusion 3. Intentionality and Perception (I): The Fundamental Irrelevance of Intentionality to Phenomenal Consciousness 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Searle’s Appeal to Intentionality in Perception, and the Illuminating Contrast with Crane 3.3 Presentationality and the ‘Blocking Function’ 32 32 35 40 42 45 47 48 49 49 51 58
X CONTENTS 3.4 Crane’s Own Account of Intentionality 3.5 The Intentionalist’s Dilemma and Its History 3.6 How Appeal to Transparency Helps No-one 4. Intentionality and Perception (II): Attempts to Articulate the ‘Content’ and ‘Object’ Distinction 4.1 Introductory Remarks 4.2 Modern Responses (i): Smith: ‘Phenomenal Objects’ Are Not Objects in the Relevant Sense 4.3 Modern Responses (ii): The Contents of Subjective Experience as Abstractions: Dretske, Lycan, and Jackson 4.4 Modern Responses (iii): Contents as Abstract: Johnston and Schellenberg 4.5 Modern Responses (iv):Schellenberg on Discriminatory Capacities 4.6 Conclusion 61 63 66 69 69 70 72 74 78 79 5. Singular Reference and Its Relation to Intentionality 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Brentano’s Howler 5.3 Mill as Supposed Proponent of Direct Reference 5.4 Intentionality and the Distinctive Character of Thought: Having a Conception of an Object, Mental Files, and Mental Maps 5.5 A Note on ‘Content’ and ‘Object’ 5.6 A Different Model of Intentionality for Sensations? 5.7 ‘Representation’ in a Reductive Sense 5.8 Conclusion: World Maps and Perception 80 80 81 82 6. Objectivity: How Is It Possible? 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Direct Realism and Objectivity 6.3 The Causal-Semantic Account of Objectivity 6.4 Burge on Distil Causes and the Experience of ‘How Things Look’ 6.5 The Transition to Hume 6.6 David Papineau and the Manifest Image 6.7 Constancy and Coherence: the Humean Account of Objectivity 6.8 Conclusion 91 91 92 97 100 102 105 107 114 7. Semantic Direct Realism, Critical Realism, and the Sense-Datum Theory 7.1 The Situation So
Far 7.2 How We Might UnderstandDirectness 7.3 SDR and Intentionalism 7.4 SDR and Relationalism 7.5 Critical Realism 7.6 The Sense-Datum Theory and SDR 115 115 116 117 122 123 125 84 87 88 89 90
CONTENTS ХІ 8. Building the Manifest World 126 8.1 Introduction 126 8.2 The Role of Judgement in, and Its Integrationwith, Perception 127 8.3 The Sense-Datum Theory Is Not an Error Theory 132 8.4 Our Spatial World and Visual Experience 134 8.5 Perceiving Objects, Not Just Qualities 135 8.6 Availability and Phenomenology 141 8.7 Sense-Data, Direct Realism, and the Common-Sense Understanding of Perception 142 8.8 Conclusion 143 PART II: WHAT THE WORLD IS, IN ITSELF Problematic Nature of the Modern Conception of Matter Introduction Sensible Qualities, the Nature of Matter and the Regress of Powers Contemporary Discussion of the Powers Regress Grounding Basic Powers Quiddities, and Similar Devices The Humean Account of Causation: Against the Primitiveness of Regularity 162 9.7 Scientific Realism about Quantum Theory, and Common-Sense 9. The 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 147 147 147 152 156 160 165 10. Two Suggestive Berkeleian Arguments 10.1 Introduction 10.2 The Sense-Dependence of Qualities 10.3 The Physical World and the Nature of Thought 174 174 174 178 11. Bishop Berkeley and John Foster on Problems with Physical Realism about Space 187 11.1 Introduction: Two Berkelian Arguments about the Nature of Space 11.2 Mites, Men, and Objective Space 11.3 Newton’s Thought Experiments and Absolute Space 11.4 John Foster on Spatial Topology and Empirical Reality 11.5 Conclusion 187 187 192 198 205 12. Mentálist Alternatives to Berkeleian Theism, and Their Failure 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Hume-Mill Phenomenalism 12.3 Panpsychism 12.4 Idealism without God 12.5 God as the Source of the Lawsof
Nature 12.6 Conclusion 207 207 208 213 220 221 224 General Conclusion Bibliography Index 225 227 233
|
adam_txt |
Contents 1 1 2 3 4 Introduction 1 The Aim of This Book 2 Part I: Chapter by Chapter 3 Part II: Its Rationale through the Chapters 4 The Nature of Sense-Data PART I: HOW THE WORLD MANIFESTS ITSELF TO US 1. The Causal Argument for Sense-data, ‘Philosophers’ Hallucinations’, and the Disjunctive Response 1.1 Philosophers’Hallucination: Introductory Remarks 1.2 Preliminary Thoughts on the Role of Causation in Perception 1.3 Philosophers’Hallucinations: The Argument 1.4 Strategies for Opposing the Causal-Hallucinatory Argument 1.5 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination: Introductory Remarks 1.6 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination; (i) Martin’s Tndiscriminability’ Account 1.7 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination; (ii) Fish’s ‘Belief’ Account 1.8 Disjunctivist Accounts of Hallucination; (iii) Soteriou and ‘Seeming to Experience’ 1.9 Naïve Realism and Philosophers’ Hallucinations: Conclusion 11 11 12 14 17 22 22 26 28 30 2. Naïve Realism and the Argument from Illusion 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Disjunctivism and Illusion 2.3 French and Phillips’ ‘Austere’ Naïve Realism, and Why It Is Not as Austere as They Hope 2.4 Brewer, Campbell, and Perspectivalism 2.5 The Perspectivalism of Fish and Kalderon 2.6 Genone and the Doxastic Theory 2.7 Conclusion 3. Intentionality and Perception (I): The Fundamental Irrelevance of Intentionality to Phenomenal Consciousness 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Searle’s Appeal to Intentionality in Perception, and the Illuminating Contrast with Crane 3.3 Presentationality and the ‘Blocking Function’ 32 32 35 40 42 45 47 48 49 49 51 58
X CONTENTS 3.4 Crane’s Own Account of Intentionality 3.5 The Intentionalist’s Dilemma and Its History 3.6 How Appeal to Transparency Helps No-one 4. Intentionality and Perception (II): Attempts to Articulate the ‘Content’ and ‘Object’ Distinction 4.1 Introductory Remarks 4.2 Modern Responses (i): Smith: ‘Phenomenal Objects’ Are Not Objects in the Relevant Sense 4.3 Modern Responses (ii): The Contents of Subjective Experience as Abstractions: Dretske, Lycan, and Jackson 4.4 Modern Responses (iii): Contents as Abstract: Johnston and Schellenberg 4.5 Modern Responses (iv):Schellenberg on Discriminatory Capacities 4.6 Conclusion 61 63 66 69 69 70 72 74 78 79 5. Singular Reference and Its Relation to Intentionality 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Brentano’s Howler 5.3 Mill as Supposed Proponent of Direct Reference 5.4 Intentionality and the Distinctive Character of Thought: Having a Conception of an Object, Mental Files, and Mental Maps 5.5 A Note on ‘Content’ and ‘Object’ 5.6 A Different Model of Intentionality for Sensations? 5.7 ‘Representation’ in a Reductive Sense 5.8 Conclusion: World Maps and Perception 80 80 81 82 6. Objectivity: How Is It Possible? 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Direct Realism and Objectivity 6.3 The Causal-Semantic Account of Objectivity 6.4 Burge on Distil Causes and the Experience of ‘How Things Look’ 6.5 The Transition to Hume 6.6 David Papineau and the Manifest Image 6.7 Constancy and Coherence: the Humean Account of Objectivity 6.8 Conclusion 91 91 92 97 100 102 105 107 114 7. Semantic Direct Realism, Critical Realism, and the Sense-Datum Theory 7.1 The Situation So
Far 7.2 How We Might UnderstandDirectness 7.3 SDR and Intentionalism 7.4 SDR and Relationalism 7.5 Critical Realism 7.6 The Sense-Datum Theory and SDR 115 115 116 117 122 123 125 84 87 88 89 90
CONTENTS ХІ 8. Building the Manifest World 126 8.1 Introduction 126 8.2 The Role of Judgement in, and Its Integrationwith, Perception 127 8.3 The Sense-Datum Theory Is Not an Error Theory 132 8.4 Our Spatial World and Visual Experience 134 8.5 Perceiving Objects, Not Just Qualities 135 8.6 Availability and Phenomenology 141 8.7 Sense-Data, Direct Realism, and the Common-Sense Understanding of Perception 142 8.8 Conclusion 143 PART II: WHAT THE WORLD IS, IN ITSELF Problematic Nature of the Modern Conception of Matter Introduction Sensible Qualities, the Nature of Matter and the Regress of Powers Contemporary Discussion of the Powers Regress Grounding Basic Powers Quiddities, and Similar Devices The Humean Account of Causation: Against the Primitiveness of Regularity 162 9.7 Scientific Realism about Quantum Theory, and Common-Sense 9. The 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 9.6 147 147 147 152 156 160 165 10. Two Suggestive Berkeleian Arguments 10.1 Introduction 10.2 The Sense-Dependence of Qualities 10.3 The Physical World and the Nature of Thought 174 174 174 178 11. Bishop Berkeley and John Foster on Problems with Physical Realism about Space 187 11.1 Introduction: Two Berkelian Arguments about the Nature of Space 11.2 Mites, Men, and Objective Space 11.3 Newton’s Thought Experiments and Absolute Space 11.4 John Foster on Spatial Topology and Empirical Reality 11.5 Conclusion 187 187 192 198 205 12. Mentálist Alternatives to Berkeleian Theism, and Their Failure 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Hume-Mill Phenomenalism 12.3 Panpsychism 12.4 Idealism without God 12.5 God as the Source of the Lawsof
Nature 12.6 Conclusion 207 207 208 213 220 221 224 General Conclusion Bibliography Index 225 227 233 |
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spelling | Robinson, Howard 1945- Verfasser (DE-588)172347122 aut Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself Howard Robinson Perception & idealism First edition Oxford ; New York Oxford University Press 2022 xi, 234 Seiten Illustrationen 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 gnd rswk-swf Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd rswk-swf Repräsentation Philosophie (DE-588)7654167-8 gnd rswk-swf Perception (Philosophy) Idealism Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 s Repräsentation Philosophie (DE-588)7654167-8 s Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 s DE-604 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034145188&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Robinson, Howard 1945- Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 gnd Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd Repräsentation Philosophie (DE-588)7654167-8 gnd |
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title | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself |
title_alt | Perception & idealism |
title_auth | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself |
title_exact_search | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself |
title_exact_search_txtP | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself |
title_full | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself Howard Robinson |
title_fullStr | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself Howard Robinson |
title_full_unstemmed | Perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself Howard Robinson |
title_short | Perception and idealism |
title_sort | perception and idealism an essay on how the world manifests itself to us and how it probably is in itself |
title_sub | an essay on how the world manifests itself to us, and how it (probably) is in itself |
topic | Idealismus (DE-588)4026468-3 gnd Wahrnehmung (DE-588)4064317-7 gnd Repräsentation Philosophie (DE-588)7654167-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Idealismus Wahrnehmung Repräsentation Philosophie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034145188&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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