This book provides an up-to-date and accessible overview of the hottest and most influential contemporary debates in philosophy of perception, written especially for this volume by many of the most important philosophers of the field. The book addresses the following key questions: Can perception be unconscious? What is the relation between perc
This book provides an up-to-date and accessible overview of the hottest and most influential contemporary debates in philosophy of perception, written especially for this volume by many of the most important philosophers of the field. The book addresses the following key questions: Can perception be unconscious? What is the relation between perc
Bence Nanay is Professor of Philosophy and BOF Research Professor at the University of Antwerp.
Inhaltsangabe
Current Controversies in the Philosophy of Perception Edited by Bence Nanay Table of contents: 1. Bence Nanay: Philosophy of perception: A road map with lots of bypass roads Part I: Are perceptual states representations? 2. Adam Pautz: Experiences are representations: An empirical argument. 3. Heather Logue: Are perceptual experiences just representations? Part II: Is perception thin or rich? 4. Susanna Siegel and Alex Byrne: Rich or thin? Part III: Non-visual sense modalities 5. John Kulvicki: Auditory perspectives 6. Matthew Nudds: Non-visual senses: The distinctive role of sounds and smells. Part IV: The multimodality of perception 7. Casey O'Callaghan: Enhancement through coordination 8. Mohan Matthen: Is perceptual experience normally multimodal? Part V: Is attention necessary for perception? 9. Bob Kentridge and Berit Brogaard: The functional roles of attention 10. Wayne Wu: Attention and perception: A necessary connection? Part VI: Can perception be unconscious? 11. Ian Phillips and Ned Block: Debate on unconscious perception Appendix 12. Other controversies in philosophy of perception
Current Controversies in the Philosophy of Perception Edited by Bence Nanay Table of contents: 1. Bence Nanay: Philosophy of perception: A road map with lots of bypass roads Part I: Are perceptual states representations? 2. Adam Pautz: Experiences are representations: An empirical argument. 3. Heather Logue: Are perceptual experiences just representations? Part II: Is perception thin or rich? 4. Susanna Siegel and Alex Byrne: Rich or thin? Part III: Non-visual sense modalities 5. John Kulvicki: Auditory perspectives 6. Matthew Nudds: Non-visual senses: The distinctive role of sounds and smells. Part IV: The multimodality of perception 7. Casey O'Callaghan: Enhancement through coordination 8. Mohan Matthen: Is perceptual experience normally multimodal? Part V: Is attention necessary for perception? 9. Bob Kentridge and Berit Brogaard: The functional roles of attention 10. Wayne Wu: Attention and perception: A necessary connection? Part VI: Can perception be unconscious? 11. Ian Phillips and Ned Block: Debate on unconscious perception Appendix 12. Other controversies in philosophy of perception
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