Stephen Everson presents a comprehensive new study of Aristotle's account of perception and related mental capacities. Recent debate about Aristotle's theory of mind has focused on this account, which is Aristotle's most sustained and detailed attempt to describe and explain the behaviour of living
Aristotle on perceiving objects
โ Scribed by Anna Marmodoro
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 305
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1 - The metaphysical foundations of perception
Introduction
1.1 Aristotle's power ontology
1.2 The nature of causal powers
1.3 Causal powers in actuality
1.4 Relations and relatives
1.5 Causation without glue
1.6 The causal powers model in Physics III 3
Concluding remarks
Chapter 2- Aristotle's causal powers theory of perception
Introduction
2.1 The faculty of perception
2.2 The five senses
2.3 The power(s) to cause perceptual experiences
2.4 Aristotle's causal powers theory of perception
2.5 Alternative interpretations of De Anima III 2
Concluding remarks
Appendix: How do the senses 'take on' perceptible qualities?
Chapter 3 - Aristotle's subtle perceptual realism
Introduction
3.1 Perceptible qualities in second actuality
3.1.1 The single-track powers view
3.1.2 The multi-track & multi-stage powers view
3.2 Objectivity of content and subjectivity of experience
3.2.1 Aristotle's Subtle Perceptual Realism
3.2.2 Aristotle and McDowell
3.3 The role of the medium in perception
Concluding remarks
Chapter 4 - The problem of complex perceptual content
Introduction
4.1 The common sense and the perception of complex perceptual content
4.2 Simultaneous perception
4.3 Incidental perception
4.4 Perception of the common sensibles
4.5 From the perception of the common sensibles to the perception of objects
Concluding remarks
Appendix: Varieties of incidental perception
Chapter 5 - Unity of subject, operation, content, and time
Introduction
5.1 Physical constraints on complex perceptual content
5.2 The unity of subject, of operation and of time
5.3 No duplication of perceptual awareness
5.4 A 'robust' interpretation of the common sense
5.5 A new individuation principle for the common sense
Concluding remarks
Chapter 6 - Mixing the many and partitioning the one
Introduction
6. 1 The Mixed Contents Model
6.2 The Multiple Sensors Model
6.3 The Ratio Model
Concluding remarks
Chapter 7 - One and many perceptual faculties
Introduction
7.1 The Relative Identity Model
7.2 The Substance Model
7.3 The Common Power Model
Concluding remarks
Chapter 8 - Conclusions
Bibliography
โฆ Subjects
PHILOSOPHY / History et Surveys / Ancient et Classical / bisacsh;Aristoteles, -- v384-v322;Wahrnehmung
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Beginning with his doctoral dissertation in 1950 which introduced the study of event perception and the application of vector analysis to perception, Gunnar Johansson has been a seminal figure in the field of perception. His work on biomechanical motion in the 1970s challenged conventional notions a
In his work On Sense Perception, Aristotle discusses the material conditions of perception, starting with the sense organs and moving to the material basis of colour, flavour and odour. His Pythagorean account of hues as a ratio of dark to light was enthusiastically endorsed by Goethe against Newton
Hughes explains the key elements in Aristotle's Nichomachean Ethics terminology and highlights the controversy regarding the interpretations of his writings. In addition, he examines the role that Aristotle's ethics continue to play in contemporary moral philosophy by comparing and contrasting his v
<span>The impact of Aristotle cannot be overestimated, covering not only the "first philosophy", which later was to become "metaphysics", but several different areas, ranging from ethics and politics to rhetoric and poetry. A special status belongs to the fundamentals of thinking, treated in the log