Christian Coseru
Perceiving Reality
Christian Coseru
Perceiving Reality
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This book examines the epistemic function of perception and the relation between language and conceptual thought, and provides new ways of conceptualizing the Buddhist defense of the reflexivity thesis of consciousness: namely, that each cognitive event is to be understood as involving a pre-reflective implicit awareness of its own occurrence.
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This book examines the epistemic function of perception and the relation between language and conceptual thought, and provides new ways of conceptualizing the Buddhist defense of the reflexivity thesis of consciousness: namely, that each cognitive event is to be understood as involving a pre-reflective implicit awareness of its own occurrence.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- 2nd edition
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Oktober 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 160mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 748g
- ISBN-13: 9780199843381
- ISBN-10: 0199843384
- Artikelnr.: 35054477
- Verlag: Oxford University Press, USA
- 2nd edition
- Seitenzahl: 384
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Oktober 2012
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 160mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 748g
- ISBN-13: 9780199843381
- ISBN-10: 0199843384
- Artikelnr.: 35054477
Assistant Professor of Philosophy, College of Charleston
Abbreviations
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Methodological and Metatheoretical Considerations
1. Doctrine and Argument
2. Reason and Discourse Analysis
3. Cognition as Enactive Transformation
4. Phenomenological Epistemology and the Project of Naturalism
Chapter 3: Sensation and the Empirical Consciousness
1. No-self and the Domains of Experience
2. Two Dimensions of Mind: Consciousness as Discernment and Sentience
3. Attention and Mental Proliferation
4. Cognitive Awareness and Its Object
Chapter 4: Perception, Conception, and Language
1. Shared Notions about Perceptual Knowledge
2. Debating the Criteria for Reliable Cognition
3. Cognitive Aspects and Linguistic Conventions
4. Epistemology as Cognitive Event Theory
Chapter 5: An Encyclopaedic and Compassionate Setting for Buddhist Epistemology
1. The Definition of Purpose: Dependent Arising and Compassion
2. Mapping the Ontological and Epistemological Domains
3. Perception and the Principle of Clarity
Chapter 6: Perception as an Epistemic Modality
1. "Conception Free" as a condition of "Perceptual Knowledge"
2. Perception, Conception, and the Problem of Naming
3. Cognitive Errors and Perceptual Illusions
Chapter 7: Foundationalism and the Phenomenology of Perception
1. Intrinsic Ascertainment and the "Given"
2. Particulars and Phenomenal Objects
3. Foundationalism and Its Malcontents
4. Naturalism and Its Discontents
5. Beyond Representation: An Enactive Perception Theory
Chapter 8: Perception, Self-Awareness, and Intentionality
1. Reflexivity and the Aspectual Nature of Intentional Reference
2. Knowledge, Phenomenal Objects, and the Cognitive Subconscious
3. Phenomenology and the Intentionality of Perception
Chapter 9: In Defense of Epistemological Optimism
1. A Moving Horizon
2. Embodied Consciousness: Beyond "Seeing" and "Seeing As"
3. Epistemic Authority Without Manifest Truth
Bibliography
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Methodological and Metatheoretical Considerations
1. Doctrine and Argument
2. Reason and Discourse Analysis
3. Cognition as Enactive Transformation
4. Phenomenological Epistemology and the Project of Naturalism
Chapter 3: Sensation and the Empirical Consciousness
1. No-self and the Domains of Experience
2. Two Dimensions of Mind: Consciousness as Discernment and Sentience
3. Attention and Mental Proliferation
4. Cognitive Awareness and Its Object
Chapter 4: Perception, Conception, and Language
1. Shared Notions about Perceptual Knowledge
2. Debating the Criteria for Reliable Cognition
3. Cognitive Aspects and Linguistic Conventions
4. Epistemology as Cognitive Event Theory
Chapter 5: An Encyclopaedic and Compassionate Setting for Buddhist Epistemology
1. The Definition of Purpose: Dependent Arising and Compassion
2. Mapping the Ontological and Epistemological Domains
3. Perception and the Principle of Clarity
Chapter 6: Perception as an Epistemic Modality
1. "Conception Free" as a condition of "Perceptual Knowledge"
2. Perception, Conception, and the Problem of Naming
3. Cognitive Errors and Perceptual Illusions
Chapter 7: Foundationalism and the Phenomenology of Perception
1. Intrinsic Ascertainment and the "Given"
2. Particulars and Phenomenal Objects
3. Foundationalism and Its Malcontents
4. Naturalism and Its Discontents
5. Beyond Representation: An Enactive Perception Theory
Chapter 8: Perception, Self-Awareness, and Intentionality
1. Reflexivity and the Aspectual Nature of Intentional Reference
2. Knowledge, Phenomenal Objects, and the Cognitive Subconscious
3. Phenomenology and the Intentionality of Perception
Chapter 9: In Defense of Epistemological Optimism
1. A Moving Horizon
2. Embodied Consciousness: Beyond "Seeing" and "Seeing As"
3. Epistemic Authority Without Manifest Truth
Bibliography
Abbreviations
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Methodological and Metatheoretical Considerations
1. Doctrine and Argument
2. Reason and Discourse Analysis
3. Cognition as Enactive Transformation
4. Phenomenological Epistemology and the Project of Naturalism
Chapter 3: Sensation and the Empirical Consciousness
1. No-self and the Domains of Experience
2. Two Dimensions of Mind: Consciousness as Discernment and Sentience
3. Attention and Mental Proliferation
4. Cognitive Awareness and Its Object
Chapter 4: Perception, Conception, and Language
1. Shared Notions about Perceptual Knowledge
2. Debating the Criteria for Reliable Cognition
3. Cognitive Aspects and Linguistic Conventions
4. Epistemology as Cognitive Event Theory
Chapter 5: An Encyclopaedic and Compassionate Setting for Buddhist Epistemology
1. The Definition of Purpose: Dependent Arising and Compassion
2. Mapping the Ontological and Epistemological Domains
3. Perception and the Principle of Clarity
Chapter 6: Perception as an Epistemic Modality
1. "Conception Free" as a condition of "Perceptual Knowledge"
2. Perception, Conception, and the Problem of Naming
3. Cognitive Errors and Perceptual Illusions
Chapter 7: Foundationalism and the Phenomenology of Perception
1. Intrinsic Ascertainment and the "Given"
2. Particulars and Phenomenal Objects
3. Foundationalism and Its Malcontents
4. Naturalism and Its Discontents
5. Beyond Representation: An Enactive Perception Theory
Chapter 8: Perception, Self-Awareness, and Intentionality
1. Reflexivity and the Aspectual Nature of Intentional Reference
2. Knowledge, Phenomenal Objects, and the Cognitive Subconscious
3. Phenomenology and the Intentionality of Perception
Chapter 9: In Defense of Epistemological Optimism
1. A Moving Horizon
2. Embodied Consciousness: Beyond "Seeing" and "Seeing As"
3. Epistemic Authority Without Manifest Truth
Bibliography
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Methodological and Metatheoretical Considerations
1. Doctrine and Argument
2. Reason and Discourse Analysis
3. Cognition as Enactive Transformation
4. Phenomenological Epistemology and the Project of Naturalism
Chapter 3: Sensation and the Empirical Consciousness
1. No-self and the Domains of Experience
2. Two Dimensions of Mind: Consciousness as Discernment and Sentience
3. Attention and Mental Proliferation
4. Cognitive Awareness and Its Object
Chapter 4: Perception, Conception, and Language
1. Shared Notions about Perceptual Knowledge
2. Debating the Criteria for Reliable Cognition
3. Cognitive Aspects and Linguistic Conventions
4. Epistemology as Cognitive Event Theory
Chapter 5: An Encyclopaedic and Compassionate Setting for Buddhist Epistemology
1. The Definition of Purpose: Dependent Arising and Compassion
2. Mapping the Ontological and Epistemological Domains
3. Perception and the Principle of Clarity
Chapter 6: Perception as an Epistemic Modality
1. "Conception Free" as a condition of "Perceptual Knowledge"
2. Perception, Conception, and the Problem of Naming
3. Cognitive Errors and Perceptual Illusions
Chapter 7: Foundationalism and the Phenomenology of Perception
1. Intrinsic Ascertainment and the "Given"
2. Particulars and Phenomenal Objects
3. Foundationalism and Its Malcontents
4. Naturalism and Its Discontents
5. Beyond Representation: An Enactive Perception Theory
Chapter 8: Perception, Self-Awareness, and Intentionality
1. Reflexivity and the Aspectual Nature of Intentional Reference
2. Knowledge, Phenomenal Objects, and the Cognitive Subconscious
3. Phenomenology and the Intentionality of Perception
Chapter 9: In Defense of Epistemological Optimism
1. A Moving Horizon
2. Embodied Consciousness: Beyond "Seeing" and "Seeing As"
3. Epistemic Authority Without Manifest Truth
Bibliography