
Published online:
10 September 2015
Published in print:
01 July 2015
Online ISBN:
9780191756566
Print ISBN:
9780199600472
Contents
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1 Some Puzzles about Perceptual Demonstrative Thought 1 Some Puzzles about Perceptual Demonstrative Thought
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First puzzle—directness First puzzle—directness
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Second puzzle—comprehensiveness Second puzzle—comprehensiveness
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Third puzzle—classification Third puzzle—classification
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Fourth puzzle—category Fourth puzzle—category
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Fifth puzzle—focus Fifth puzzle—focus
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Sixth puzzle—awareness Sixth puzzle—awareness
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Seventh puzzle—emptiness Seventh puzzle—emptiness
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2 Descriptivist Theories vs. Acquaintance Theories 2 Descriptivist Theories vs. Acquaintance Theories
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Descriptivist theories Descriptivist theories
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Acquaintance-theoretic views Acquaintance-theoretic views
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3 The Traditional View of What Cognitively Unaided Perception Delivers, and how it Skews the Traditional Debate about Perception and Demonstratives 3 The Traditional View of What Cognitively Unaided Perception Delivers, and how it Skews the Traditional Debate about Perception and Demonstratives
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4 The New Debate 4 The New Debate
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References References
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Chapter
43 Perception and Demonstratives
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Imogen Dickie
Imogen Dickie
Philosophy, University of Toronto
Find on
Imogen Dickie, University of Toronto
Pages
833–852
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Published:02 June 2014
Cite
Dickie, Imogen, 'Perception and Demonstratives', in Mohan Matthen (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Perception (2015; online edn, Oxford Academic, 10 Sept. 2015), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199600472.013.041, accessed 25 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
A ‘perceptual demonstrative’ thought is a thought of the kind standardly made available by a perceptual link with an object, and standardly expressed using ‘this’ or that’. This chapter is an introduction to a range of questions about how perception of objects enables us to form perceptual demonstrative thoughts about them.
Series
Oxford Handbooks
Collection:
Oxford Handbooks Online
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