<span>Renรจ Descartes is commonly portrayed as a strict rationalist, a philosopher who theorized a radical, unresolvable split between mind and body. In this long-overdue examination of the role of imagination in Descartes's thought, Dennis Sepper reveals a Descartes quite different from the usual du
Thinking in Images: Imagistic Cognition and Non-propositional Content
โ Scribed by Piotr Kozak (editor)
- Publisher
- Bloomsbury Academic
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 249
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
What does it mean to think with images? There is a well-established tradition of studying thought processes through the nature of language, and we know much more about thinking with language than about thinking with images. Piotr Kozac takes an important step towards rectifying this position.
Presenting a unified theory of different types of images, such as diagrams, maps, technical drawings and photographs, Kozac argues that images provide a genuine and autonomous form of content and knowledge. In contrast to the propositional view of thinking and resemblance-based accounts, he puts forward a measurement-theoretic account of images as operations that exemplify measures, revealing the outcomes of measurement operations performed on a depicted situation. Bringing together insights from philosophy of science, picture-theory, cognitive science and cognitive psychology, this book demonstrates that we can only understand what an image is if we truly understand the role they play in our thought processes, challenging the prevailing view that the utility of images is only instrumental and cognitively inferior.
โฆ Table of Contents
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Image definition
Imagistic thinking
A measurement-theoretic account of thinking with images
Content overview
Chapter 1: What is the problem of thinking with images?
The Irreducibility Thesis
Two interpretations of the Irreducibility Thesis
The Translatability Thesis
Summary
Chapter 2: What is thinking?
The Epistemological Challenge
Wittgensteinโs argument from content indeterminacy
Frege-Davidsonโs argument from lack of logical form
The pictorial fallacy
The Semantical Challenge
The Metaphysical Challenge
The Received View
Metaphors of thinking
Summary
Chapter 3: What answers should we expect?
Imagistic thoughts as theoretical objects
Thoughtsโperception border
WittgensteinโRyleโs sceptical argument
The operational approach
Explaining operations
Summary
Chapter 4: What do images do?
Case Study 1: Knot diagrams
What are constructions?
The content of diagrams
Properties of constructions
Explaining resemblance
Summary
Chapter 5: Recognition-based identification
Case Study 2: The picture of a black hole
Naturalness of icons
What is recognition?
Varieties of reference
Construction invariants
Iconic convention
Summary
Chapter 6: What is an image?
Two-dimensional model of iconic reference
Correctness conditions
The measurement-theoretic account of images
Application: Impossible images
Summary
Chapter 7: Thinking with images
Imagistic knowledge
Iconic content
Metaphysical constraints
Application 1: Representational format
Application 2: Mental imagery
Summary
Chapter 8: Conclusion
Notes
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Literature
Index
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