
Contents
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6.1 Imagination 6.1 Imagination
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6.2 The Impoverishment View 6.2 The Impoverishment View
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6.3 The Will-Dependence View 6.3 The Will-Dependence View
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6.4 The Non-Existence View 6.4 The Non-Existence View
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6.5 A Pessimistic Conclusion 6.5 A Pessimistic Conclusion
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References References
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6 Imaginative Experience
Get accessAmy Kind is Russell K. Pitzer Professor of Philosophy at Claremont McKenna College. Her research interests lie broadly in the philosophy of mind, but most of her work centers on issues relating to imagination and to phenomenal consciousness. In addition to authoring the introductory textbook Persons and Personal Identity (Polity 2015), she has edited The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Imagination (Routledge 2016) and Philosophy of Mind in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries (Routledge 2018), and she has co-edited Knowledge through Imagination (Oxford 2016).
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Published:09 July 2020
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Abstract
When developing accounts of imaginative experience, philosophers generally (though not universally) accept two pieces of phenomenological data as a starting point: (1) the experiential character of imagining is importantly similar to that of perceiving; (2) despite this similarity, the experiential character of imagining is nonetheless importantly different from perceiving. Someone who aims to explain imaginative experience must discharge two principal tasks: explain the similarity between the experiential character of imagination and the experiential character of perception, and explain the difference. The main focus of this chapter is the second of these tasks. Three views that aim to explain how the character of imaginative experience differs from the experiential character of related mental states like perception are considered. Close examination reveals that none gives an adequate account of the character of imaginative experience. The final section briefly explores what their failure teaches us about the project of giving an account of imaginative experience.
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