Log In
Or create an account ->
Imperial Library
Home
About
News
Upload
Forum
Help
Login/SignUp
Index
Cover page
Halftitle page
Title page
Copyright page
Dedication page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Halftitle page
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Bad Argument One of the Biggest Mistakes in Philosophy in the Past Several Centuries
I. A Small Fallacy and a Large Mistake
II. Digression about Intentionality and Phenomenology
III. Direct Realism
IV. Objectivity and Subjectivity
V. Diagrams of Visual Perception
VI. The Argument for the Rejection of Naïve, Direct Realism
VII. The Fallacy in the Argument
VIII. Historical Consequences of the Bad Argument
Appendix A to Chapter 1: Summary of the Theory of Intentionality
1. Content and Object
2. Intentional Objects
3. Propositional Attitudes
4. Propositions as Abstract Entities
5. The Ambiguity in “Condition”
6. Representation and Presentation
7. Observer Independent and Observer Relative Intentionality
8. Intentionality Is Part of Our Biology
9. Intentional Causation
10. Network and Background
Appendix B to Chapter 1: Consciousness
1. The Definition of Consciousness
2. Features of Consciousness
3. Some Mistaken Accounts of Consciousness in Perception
Chapter 2: The Intentionality of Perceptual Experiences
I. Skepticism about the Intentionality of Perception
II. Special Features of Perceptual Intentionality
III. Vision and the Background: You Have to Learn How to See
IV. What Happened to Sense Data?
V. The Brain in a Vat
VI. Conclusion
Chapter 3: Further Developments of the Argument Against the Bad Argument
I. Classical Examples of the Bad Argument
II. How the Refutation of the Bad Argument Against Direct Realism Extends to Other Versions of the Argument from Illusion
III. Consequences of the Bad Argument for the History of Philosophy
IV. Conclusion
Chapter 4 How Perceptual Intentionality Works, Part OneBasic Features, Causation, and Intentional Content
I. Analytic Philosophy and the Backward Road
II. The Boundaries of the Visual
III. The Objective and Subjective Perceptual Fields
IV. The Structure of the Subjective Visual Field
V. The Hierarchical Structure of Visual Perception
VI. How Do the Phenomenological Features of the Subjective Visual Field Determine the Conditions of Satisfaction of the Visual Experience?
VII. My Current View
VIII. The Role of Presentational Intentional Causation
IX. The Primary Qualities
X. The Backward Road
XI. A Possible Objection
XII. Summary of the Results So Far
Chapter 5 How Perceptual Intentionality Works, Part Two Extending the Analysis to Non-basic Features
I. From Bottom to Top of Visual Perception
II. Three-Dimensional Perceptions
III. Temporal Relations
IV. Extending the Analysis Upward
V. Recognition and the Problem of Particularity
VI. Solution of Some Outstanding Questions about Perception
VII. The Brain in the Vat
VIII. Conclusion
Chapter 6: Disjunctivism
I. What Exactly is Disjunctivism?
II. Arguments in Favor of Disjunctivism and Replies to Them
III. Consciousness and Perception: Campbell’s Account
IV. The Real Source of the Disagreement
V. Disjunctivism and Visual Imagination
Chapter 7: Unconscious Perception
I. A Brief History of the Unconscious
II. Suspicions about Consciousness
III. Does Consciousness Matter?
Chapter 8: Classical Theories of Perception
Skepticism and the Classical Theories of Perception
I. Skepticism
II. Phenomenalism, Idealism, and the Representative Theory of Perception
III. Refutation of the Representative Theory of Perception
IV. Refutation of Phenomenalism
V. The Classical Theories and the Philosophical Problem of Perception
VI. Primary and Secondary Qualities
Name Index
Subject Index
← Prev
Back
Next →
← Prev
Back
Next →