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perception

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Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 112–115.
Published: 01 January 2009
...James A. Harris Ryan Nichols, Thomas Reid's Theory of Perception . Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2007. xvi + 301 pp. Cornell University 2009 BOOK REVIEWS Hendrik Lorenz, The Brute Within: Appetitive Desire in Plato and Aristotle. Oxford: Clarendon, 2006. 229 pp...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2017) 126 (3): 385–389.
Published: 01 July 2017
...Victor Caston Kalderon Mark Eli , Form without Matter: Empedocles and Aristotle on Color Perception . Oxford: Oxford University Press , 2015 . 216 pp . © 2017 by Cornell University 2017 In this stimulating study, Mark Kalderon enlists the history of philosophy to pursue...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2014) 123 (3): 339–342.
Published: 01 July 2014
...Thomas M. Tuozzo Moss Jessica Dawn , Aristotle on the Apparent Good: Perception, Phantasia, Thought, and Desire . Oxford : Oxford University Press , 2012 . xv +255 pp . © 2014 by Cornell University 2014 In this important book, Moss develops a comprehensive account...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2019) 128 (1): 126–130.
Published: 01 January 2019
...Casey O'Callaghan Siegel Susanna , The Rationality of Perception . Oxford: Oxford University Press , 2017 . xxv + 220 pp . © 2019 by Cornell University 2019 The Rationality of Perception rewrites perception's rational role and its rational standing. This book is ambitious...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2011) 120 (4): 475–513.
Published: 01 October 2011
... represent subject-environment relations that are relevant to the possibilities for causal interaction between the subject and the environment; relations of the kind that J. J. Gibson dubbed affordances . The essay argues for this view chiefly through an examination of spatial perception, though other cases...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2021) 130 (4): 481–531.
Published: 01 October 2021
... experiences are intrinsically valenced, starting with behavioral experiments that support the hypothesis “that valence is encoded during the early stages of object perception and not a post-hoc label applied after recognition” (Lebrecht 2012: 54). The evidence shows that processing of valence exhibits effects...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2024) 133 (1): 92–95.
Published: 01 January 2024
... that works a lot like perceptual experience except it is intellectual. Broadly speaking, the response goes, the challenge fails because beliefs about hypothetical cases are only justified when they are produced in the right way. The right way typically relies on “perception-like” intuitions. Moreover, folk...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2023) 132 (2): 239–292.
Published: 01 April 2023
...Tyler Brooke-Wilson Perception solves computationally demanding problems at lightning fast speed. It recovers sophisticated representations of the world from degraded inputs, often in a matter of milliseconds. Any theory of perception must be able to explain how this is possible; in other words...
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Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2001) 110 (4): 635–638.
Published: 01 October 2001
...David Sosa PERCEPTION AND REASON. By Bill Brewer. New York: Oxford University Press, Clarendon Press, 1999. Pp. xviii, 281. Cornell University 2001 BOOK REVIEWS The Philosophical Review, Vol. 110, No. 4 (October 2001) PERCEPTION AND REASON...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2020) 129 (3): 323–393.
Published: 01 July 2020
...E. J. Green A venerable view holds that a border between perception and cognition is built into our cognitive architecture and that this imposes limits on the way information can flow between them. While the deliverances of perception are freely available for use in reasoning and inference...
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Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2015) 124 (4): 533–569.
Published: 01 October 2015
...Jonathan Cottrell This essay gives a new interpretation of Hume's second thoughts about minds in the Appendix, based on a new interpretation of his view of composition. In Book 1 of the Treatise , Hume argued that, as far as we can conceive it, a mind is a whole composed by all its perceptions...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2020) 129 (2): 251–298.
Published: 01 April 2020
...Zoe Jenkin According to a traditional picture, perception and belief have starkly different epistemic roles. Beliefs have epistemic statuses as justified or unjustified, depending on how they are formed and maintained. In contrast, perceptions are “unjustified justifiers.” Core cognition is a set...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (3): 285–324.
Published: 01 July 2009
..., this essay argues that unaided perception yields objective representation of the macrophysical environment. It does so in prelinguistic animals, even in animals that almost surely lack propositional attitudes. The essay concludes with explications of nondeflationary conceptions of representation...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2016) 125 (2): 205–239.
Published: 01 April 2016
...Jennifer Smalligan Marušić Locke seems to hold that we have knowledge of the existence of external objects through sensation. Two problems face Locke's account. The first problem concerns the logical form of knowledge of real existence. Locke defines knowledge as the perception of the agreement...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2017) 126 (1): 1–41.
Published: 01 January 2017
... like. Is such knowledge to be understood as knowledge of a fact, or rather as a kind of ability? From the claim that the knowledge in the target cases is not immediate, and the fact that these cases are paradigm cases of immediate knowledge of objects' kinds, the essay concludes that perception does...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2019) 128 (3): 293–336.
Published: 01 July 2019
... (1623–73) disagrees. In cases of veridical perception, she holds that grass is green in precisely the way it visually appears to be. In defense of her realist approach to sensuous colors, Cavendish argues that (i) it is impossible to conceive of colorless bodies, (ii) the very possibility of color...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2019) 128 (4): 463–509.
Published: 01 October 2019
... studies: hallucination and cognitive penetration of perception. If psychological processes were trivializable in this way, then all the debates about sameness or difference of process for different contents would be empty—they'd always be different processes, but trivially so. Since the debates aren't...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2021) 130 (2): 263–298.
Published: 01 May 2021
..., and deploy a new theoretical tool in the empirical investigation of consciousness. A noteworthy consequence of this new framework is that the structure of the mental qualities of conscious experiences is fundamentally different from the structure of the perceptible qualities of external objects. © 2021...
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Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2022) 131 (3): 327–359.
Published: 01 July 2022
... problems. This article defends the view that there is always an object of hallucination—a physical object, sometimes with spatiotemporally scattered parts. © 2022 by Cornell University 2022 perception hallucination memory scattered objects externalism When one hallucinates a flying pig...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2005) 114 (3): 359–398.
Published: 01 July 2005
...Jeff Speaks Cornell University 2005 Armstrong, David. 1968 . A Materialist Theory of the Mind . London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Byrne, Alex. 2005 . Perception and Conceptual Content. In Contemporary Debates in Epistemology , ed. E. Sosa and M. Steup. 213 -50. London: Basil...