
Contents
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I. Visual Places I. Visual Places
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II. Seeing Objects II. Seeing Objects
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III. The Peculiarities of Visual Location III. The Peculiarities of Visual Location
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IV. On Sensory Idiosyncrasy IV. On Sensory Idiosyncrasy
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Cite
Abstract
Vision presents features as located in environmental things. In this chapter, the structure of this feature-locating scheme is investigated. Austen Clark argues, correctly, that visual features are presented to us as properties that belong to certain subjects. Clark, however, thinks that these subjects are regions of space: it is argued here that they are material objects capable of motion, not mere regions of space. Thus, vision presents the world in material object-feature terms. Other modalities employ different structures: audition, for example, attributes features to sounds, not material objects. Such differences among sense modalities with regard to their representations of space and their attributions of features argue that a purely a priori or functional treatment will miss philosophically important characteristics of sensation.
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