Disjunctivism: Contemporary Readings
Disjunctivism: Contemporary Readings
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Abstract
A central debate regarding perception in contemporary philosophy concerns the disjunctive theory of perceptual experience. Until the 1960s, philosophers of perception generally assumed that a veridical perception (a perceptual experience that presents the world as it really is) and a subjectively similar hallucination must have significant mental commonalities. Disjunctivists challenge this assumption, contending that the veridical perception and the corresponding hallucination share no mental core. Suppose that while you are looking at a lemon, God suddenly removes it, while keeping your brain activity constant. Although you notice no change, disjunctivists argue that the preremoval and postremoval experiences are radically different. Disjunctivism has gained prominent supporters in recent years, as well as attracting much criticism. This reader collects in one volume classic texts that define and react to disjunctivism. These include an excerpt from a book by the late J. M. Hinton, who was the first to propose an explicitly disjunctivist position, and papers stating a number of important objections.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
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1
Visual Experiences
J. M. Hinton
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2
Selections from Experiences
J. M. Hinton
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3
Perception, Vision, and Causation
Paul Snowdon
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4
The Objects of Perceptual Experience
Paul Snowdon
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5
Selections from “Criteria, Defeasibility, and Knowledge”
John McDowell
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6
The Reality of Appearances
M. G. F. Martin
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7
Arguments from Illusion
Jonathan Dancy
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8
The Idea of Experience
Alan Millar
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9
Selections from Perception
Howard Robinson
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10
Selections from The Problem of Perception
A. D. Smith
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11
The Theory of Appearing Defended
Harold Langsam
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12
The Obscure Object of Hallucination
Mark Johnston
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13
The Limits of Self-Awareness
M. G. F. Martin
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End Matter
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