
Contents
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1.1 Introduction 1.1 Introduction
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1.2 Quality-Space Theory 1.2 Quality-Space Theory
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1.3 Individuating the Modalities 1.3 Individuating the Modalities
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1.4 Some Applications 1.4 Some Applications
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References References
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1 Quality Spaces and Sensory Modalities
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Published:August 2015
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Abstract
It’s often assumed that mental qualities cannot occur without being conscious, so that subliminal perception and other nonconscious perceptual processes do not involve genuine qualitative character. There is little to substantiate this claim, typically advanced as based on intuition. But these ostensibly pretheoretic intuitions covertly embody the traditional theory that first-person access is the last word about qualitative character. And that must be evaluated against the alternative that what is essential to mental qualities is their role in perception, whether conscious or not. A leading version of the perceptual-role approach is quality-space theory, which taxonomizes mental qualities by relative location in a quality space constructed from fine-grained perceptual discriminations. The chapter first puts forth this theory. But quality spaces rely on discriminations within a single modality. So it then uses the quality-space methodology to get an independent way to individuate the modalities, thus providing a unified treatment of qualitative mentality.
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