<P>It is commonly held that the experiences involved in cases of perception, illusion and hallucination all have the same nature. Disjunctivists deny this. They maintain that the kind of experience you have when you perceive the world isnβt one you could be having if you were hallucinating. A number
Disjunctivism
β Scribed by Soteriou, Matthew
- Publisher
- Taylor and Francis
- Year
- 2016
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
List of FiguresAcknowledgementsPreface1. May I Have Your Attention2. Mimicry and the Urgency of Differences3. A Unique Phenomenon of Distance4. Disorienting5. The Ground of Ethical FailureBibliographyIndex
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Duncan Pritchard offers an original defence of epistemological disjunctivism. This is an account of perceptual knowledge which contends that such knowledge is paradigmatically constituted by a true belief that enjoys rational support which is both factive and reflectively accessible to the agent. In
<b>Winning entry, Professional Cover/Jacket Category, in the 2009 New England Book Show sponsored by Bookbuilders of Boston. A central debate in contemporary philosophy of perception concerns the disjunctive theory of perceptual experience. Until the 1960s, philosophers of perception generally a
Disjunctivism has attracted considerable philosophical attention in recent years: it has been the source of a lively and extended debate spanning the philosophy of perception, epistemology, and the philosophy of action. Adrian Haddock and Fiona Macpherson present seventeen specially written essays,
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