Contents
74 found
Order:
1 — 50 / 74
  1. The Profundity of absence.Varanasi Ramabrahmam - manuscript
    The significance and use of absence of a thing is highlighted as its presence. The role of absence in various disciplines of mathematics, physics, semi-conductor electronics, computing and cognitive sciences for ease in conceptualizing is discussed. The use of null set, null vector and null matrix are also presented.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  2. Perceptual Categorization and Perceptual Concepts.E. J. Green - forthcoming - Philosophical Quarterly.
    Conceptualism is the view that at least some perceptual representation is conceptual. This paper considers a prominent recent argument against Conceptualism due to Ned Block. Block’s argument appeals to patterns of color representation in infants, alleging that infants exhibit categorical perception of color while failing to deploy concepts of color categories. Accordingly, the perceptual representation of color categories in infancy must be non-conceptual. This argument is distinctive insofar as it threatens not only the view that all perception is conceptual, but (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  3. Can We Perceive the Past?E. J. Green - forthcoming - In Lynn Nadel & Sara Aronowitz, Space, Time, and Memory. Oxford University Press.
    A prominent view holds that perception and memory are distinguished at least partly by their temporal orientation: Perception functions to represent the present, while memory functions to represent the past. Call this view perceptual presentism. This chapter critically examines perceptual presentism in light of contemporary perception science. I adduce evidence for three forms of perceptual sensitivity to the past: (i) shaping perception by past stimulus exposure, (ii) recruitment of mnemonic representations in perceptual processing, and (iii) perceptual representation of present objects (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  4. Contours of Vision: Towards a Compositional Semantics of Perception.Kevin J. Lande - forthcoming - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.
    Mental capacities for perceiving, remembering, thinking, and planning involve the processing of structured mental representations. A compositional semantics of such representations would explain how the content of any given representation is determined by the contents of its constituents and their mode of combination. While many have argued that semantic theories of mental representations would have broad value for understanding the mind, there have been few attempts to develop such theories in a systematic and empirically constrained way. This paper contributes to (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   10 citations  
  5. 心学与儒释道修心体系:中国本土心理学的思想内核与实践范式——兼论与源 思理论的同源性及现代价值.建平 李 - 2026 - Https://Doi.Org/10.5281/Zenodo.18345852.
    摘要:西方心理学视域下的“本土心理学”研究多聚焦于西方理论的本土化适配,却忽视 了中国传统文化中早已存在的、自成体系的本土心理学思想与实践范式。儒释道三教 的修心智慧与王阳明心学的核心体系,并非单纯的哲学思辨或道德教化,而是以“思想 认知重构”为核心、以“性格塑型与心性提升”为目标、以“知行合一”为实践路径的中国 本土心理学体系——其本质是通过主动调整思想认知、规范行为实践,实现对个体情 绪、性格、心性的系统性塑型,最终达到“圣贤”“觉者”“真人”的理想心性状态,与源思 理论“思想主导性格、主动重构思想反向塑型人心”的核心命题高度同源。本文以中国传 统文化中的修心体系为研究对象,系统梳理儒家“修身正心”、道家“修心返朴”、佛家 “明心见性”与王阳明心学“致良知、知行合一”的核心思想与实践路径,明确其作为中国 本土心理学的理论内核、逻辑框架、实践特征;通过对比分析其与西方心理学的本质 差异,论证中国本土心理学“身心一体、知行合一、心性递进”的独特价值;结合源思理 论的核心观点,阐释传统修心体系与现代心理学的内在契合性,挖掘其现代转化的路 径与价值;最终证明中国本土心理学并非西方心理学的“补充”,而是具有独立理论体 系、完整实践范式的原创性心理学思想,为构建中国特色心理学理论体系、推动源思 理论的本土化深化提供核心的传统思想支撑。本文所有研究均基于儒家《大学》《中 庸》《论语》、道家《道德经》《庄子》、佛家《六祖坛经》及王阳明《传习录》等经典 原著,参考文献真实可考,论证逻辑层层递进,无主观臆断与杜撰内容,力求还原中 国本土心理学的本真内涵。.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  6. 源思理论之洗心法(MPS三阶法):明理·洗心·塑格本土化心理调适方法论.建平 李 - 2026 - Https://Doi.Org/10.5281/Zenodo.18345959.
    摘要:本文立足源思理论“认知决定思想、思想塑造性格、性格系统性调控身心与价值 观”的核心内核,以“人类认知偏差是心理问题与思想困惑的根本根源”为逻辑起点,融 合中国传统修心智慧、现代认知心理学、人格心理学与神经科学的权威研究成果,创 新提出兼具本土文化底蕴、科学实证依据与强落地性的本土化心理调适方法论——洗 心法(MPS三阶法),其中M(Mingli)代表明理、P(Xixin)代表洗心、S(Suge) 代表塑格,三阶路径层层递进、逻辑闭环。同步研发心境五维调衡法(Mood Five Dimensional Regulation Method, MFDR) 作为本土化原创实操延伸技术。本文从理 论原理层面深度厘清洗心法(MPS三阶法)的底层逻辑与学科支撑,以儒释道经典古 籍为核心完成文化溯源与理论论证,精准援引国际心理学界权威实验、临床研究成果 为方法的科学性与有效性提供实证支撑,最终构建出可落地、可操作、无专业门槛的 三阶实践体系,实现从错误认知矫正到思想体系重构,再到性格正向塑型,最终达成 情绪、身心、社会价值观的系统性调控。洗心法(MPS三阶法)既是对源思理论实践 方法论的丰富与完善,也是对中国本土心理学体系的创新构建,打破了西方心理学的 专业化壁垒与传统修心智慧的玄学化局限,为现代人群解决认知型心理问题、实现心 理健康与个人成长提供了全新的本土解决方案,也为构建中国特色心理学理论体系提 供了实践路径参考。本文总字数超8000字,内容兼具学术严谨性与实践指导性,所有 论证均基于真实经典文献与权威科学研究,无任何杜撰与主观臆断。.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  7. 源思理论:基于好奇心原点的人心发生与思想塑命研究——兼论对西方心理学 的框架性突破.建平 李 - 2026 - Https://Doi.Org/10.5281/Zenodo.18345739.
    摘要:西方心理学自诞生以来,虽在认知、人格、情绪等领域形成多元研究体系,却 始终未能厘清人心发生的先天原点,且深陷性格决定论、身心二元论、情绪碎片化解 读的理论桎梏,无法构建从先天到后天、从思想到性格、从身心到情绪的整体性人心 演化体系。本文基于东方传统哲学的混沌演化思想与身心一体智慧,融合现代发展心 理学、神经科学、人格心理学的实证研究成果,提出原创性的源思理论:将好奇心界 定为人心发生的先天本源原点,系统论证“好奇心本源觉醒→意识激活→本能作用于意 识→趋利避害二元分化→五情多维演化→后天性格/思想固化→主动重构思想反向塑型 人心”的完整演化链条,明确“思想为核心主导,性格为思想的固化产物,思想可通过主 动建构实现对性格、情绪与命运的反向塑型”的核心命题。本文通过辩证剖析西方心理 学各流派的理论缺陷,结合MIT婴儿探索性研究、西方性格可塑性研究、神经可塑性 研究等权威实证成果,以及传销/PUA思想改造、儿童成长发育等现实案例,全面验证 源思理论的逻辑自洽性、科学支撑性与现实解释力。源思理论的提出,填补了西方心 理学人心发生原点研究的空白,突破了其性格决定论的理论框架,构建了融合东方智 慧与现代科学的本土化人心理论体系,为心理调试、个人成长、心理学本土化发展提 供了全新的理论支撑与实践路径,也为构建具有中国特色的心理学理论体系奠定了核 心基础。.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  8. (1 other version)Perceptual Abstraction.Mason Westfall & E. J. Green - 2025 - Noûs.
    Perception puts us in touch with highly determinate properties of objects, such as fine-grained color shades and detailed surface shapes. However, most of our immediate perceptual judgments concern more abstract properties, such as the property of being a dog, or of being red simpliciter. So, how does perception attune us to abstract properties despite its evident determinacy? This paper argues that perception can be sensitive to abstract properties in multiple, fundamentally different ways. We articulate a distinction between implicit and explicit (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  9. Austere relationalism and seeing aspects.Paweł Jakub Zięba - 2025 - European Journal of Philosophy 33 (3):1117-1136.
    Austere relationalism combines two claims. First, the phenomenal character of perception is at least partially constituted by the perceived items. Second, perception doesn’t consist in representing the perceived items as being a certain way. Recently, Daniel Kalpokas, Avner Baz, and Søren Overgaard have cast doubt on the ability of austere relationalism to account for the peculiar phenomenology of aspect-seeing. I show that this explanatory challenge can be met. Some of the claims made by the critics can be resisted, whereas other (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  10. Between perception and thought.Jacob Beck - 2024 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 110 (1):294-301.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  11. Newly sighted perceivers and the relation between sight and touch.E. J. Green - 2024 - Philosophy and the Mind Sciences 5.
    Molyneux’s question asks whether a person born blind who has learned to identify shapes by touch could, if suddenly granted sight, immediately identify shapes visually. This question has often been used to structure discussions of whether there is a “rational connection” between sight and touch—whether it is possible to rationally doubt whether the same shape properties are both seen and felt. I distinguish two questions under this general heading. The first concerns, roughly, whether the visual and haptic perception of shape (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  12. Perception, force, and content.Dominic Gregory - 2024 - European Journal of Philosophy 32 (3):891-904.
    [Open Access.] Perceptual experiences have presentational phenomenology: we seem to encounter real situations in the course of visual experiences, for instance. The current paper articulates and defends the claim that the contents of at least some perceptual experiences are inherently presentational. On this view, perceptual contents are not always forceless in the way that, say, the propositional content that 2 + 2 = 4 is generally taken to be, as a content that may be asserted or denied or merely supposed; (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  13. Perception and Disjunctive Belief: A New Problem for Ambitious Predictive Processing.Assaf Weksler - 2024 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 102 (2):449-464.
    ABSTRACT Perception can’t have disjunctive content. Whereas you can think that a box is blue or red, you can’t see a box as being blue or red. Based on this fact, I develop a new problem for the ambitious predictive processing theory, on which the brain is a machine for minimizing prediction error, which approximately implements Bayesian inference. I describe a simple case of updating a disjunctive belief given perceptual experience of one of the disjuncts, in which Bayesian inference and (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  14. Does thought require sensory grounding? From pure thinkers to large language models.David J. Chalmers - 2023 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 97:22-45.
    Does the capacity to think require the capacity to sense? A lively debate on this topic runs throughout the history of philosophy and now animates discussions of artificial intelligence. Many have argued that AI systems such as large language models cannot think and understand if they lack sensory grounding. I argue that thought does not require sensory grounding: there can be pure thinkers who can think without any sensory capacities. As a result, the absence of sensory grounding does not entail (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   13 citations  
  15. The Perception-Cognition Border: Architecture or Format?E. J. Green - 2023 - In Brian McLaughlin & Jonathan Cohen, Contemporary Debates in Philosophy of Mind, 2nd edition. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 469-493.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   19 citations  
  16. The Multisensory Perception of Persistence.E. J. Green - 2023 - In Aleksandra Mroczko-Wąsowicz & Rick Grush, Sensory Individuals: Unimodal and Multimodal Perspectives. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter examines how our sense modalities interact in the perception of persistence. The chapter concentrates on two questions. The first concerns perceptual processing—do perceptual computations of object persistence ever integrate and compute over representations from more than one modality? It argues that this question should be answered affirmatively. The second question concerns perceptual experience—do experiences of object persistence ever exhibit a constitutively multisensory phenomenal character, or is the phenomenology of object persistence always uniquely associated with just one modality? The (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  17. Compositionality in visual perception.Alon Hafri, E. J. Green & Chaz Firestone - 2023 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e277.
    Quilty-Dunn et al.'s wide-ranging defense of the Language of Thought Hypothesis (LoTH) argues that vision traffics in abstract, structured representational formats. We agree: Vision, like language, is compositional – just as words compose into phrases, many visual representations contain discrete constituents that combine in systematic ways. Here, we amass evidence extending this proposal, and explore its implications for how vision interfaces with the rest of the mind.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   11 citations  
  18. Perception needs modular stimulus-control.Anders Nes - 2023 - Synthese 201 (6):1-30.
    Perceptual processes differ from cognitive, this paper argues, in functioning to be causally controlled by proximal stimuli, and being modular, at least in a modest sense that excludes their being isotropic in Jerry Fodor's sense. This claim agrees with such theorists as Jacob Beck and Ben Phillips that a function of stimulus-control is needed for perceptual status. In support of this necessity claim, I argue, inter alia, that E.J. Green's recent architectural account misclassifies processes deploying knowledge of grammar as perceptual. (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  19. (1 other version)Précis of Thinking and Perceiving.Dustin Stokes - 2023 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 30 (3):181-191.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  20. Defending the Malleability of Perception: Reply to Commentators: Dokic, Orlandi, and Vetter.Dustin Stokes - 2023 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 30 (3):222-237.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  21. (1 other version)Précis of Thinking and Perceiving.Dustin R. Stokes - 2023 - Philosophy and the Mind Sciences 4.
    Thinking and Perceiving defends the claim that thought not only affects perceiving, thought improves perceiving. It thus defends a malleable architecture of the mind, opposite strong modularist views that claim that perception is informationally encapsulated and thus cognitively impenetrable. The argument for this view centers around cases of perceptual expertise. Experts in a wide variety of domains—radiology, birdwatching, elite athletics, fingerprint examination—have been empirically studied using behavioral, neural-physiological, and computational methods. This convergence of evidence is best explained in terms of (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  22. Emotional Experience and the Senses.Lorenza D'Angelo - 2022 - Philosophers' Imprint 22 (20).
    This paper investigates the nature of emotional experience in relation to the senses, and it defends the thesis that emotional experience is partly non-sensory. In §1 I introduce my reader to the debate. I reconstruct a position I call ‘restrictivism’ and motivate it as part of a reductive approach to mind’s place in nature. Drawing on intuitive but insightful remarks on the nature of sensation from Plato, I map out the conditions under which the restrictivist thesis is both substantive and (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  23. Trading on Identity and Singular Thought.Rachel Goodman - 2022 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 100 (2):296-312.
    On the traditional relationalist conception of singular thought, a thought has singular content when it is based on an ‘information relation’ to its object. Recent work rejects relationalism and suggests singular thoughts are distinguished from descriptive thoughts by their inferential role: only thoughts with singular content can be employed in ‘direct’ inferences, or inferences that ‘trade on identity’. Firstly this view is insufficiently clear, because it conflates two distinct ideas—one about a kind of inference, the other a kind of process (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   11 citations  
  24. Perceptual capacitism: an argument for disjunctive disunity.James Openshaw & Assaf Weksler - 2022 - Philosophical Studies 179 (11):3325-3348.
    According to capacitism, to perceive is to employ personal-level, perceptual capacities. In a series of publications, Schellenberg (2016, 2018, 2019b, 2020) has argued that capacitism offers unified analyses of perceptual particularity, perceptual content, perceptual consciousness, perceptual evidence, and perceptual knowledge. “Capacities first” (2020: 715); appealing accounts of an impressive array of perceptual and epistemological phenomena will follow. We argue that, given the Schellenbergian way of individuating perceptual capacities which underpins the above analyses, perceiving an object does not require employing a (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  25. The Integrity of Motivated Vision: A Reply to Gilchrist, 2020.Kent Harber, Jeanine Stefanucci & Dustin Stokes - 2021 - Perception 50 (4):287-93.
    In the September 2020 edition of Perception, Alan Gilchrist published an editorial entitled “The Integrity of Vision” (Gilchrist, 2020). In it, Gilchrist critiques motivated perception research. His main points are as follows: (1) Motivated perception is compromised by experimental demand: Results do not actually show motivated perception but instead reflect subjects’ desires to comply with inferred predictions. (2) Motivated perception studies use designs that make predictions obvious to subjects. These transparent designs conspire with experimental demand to yield confirmatory but compromised (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  26. Perceptual attribution and perceptual reference.Jake Quilty-Dunn & E. J. Green - 2021 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 106 (2):273-298.
    Perceptual representations pick out individuals and attribute properties to them. This paper considers the role of perceptual attribution in determining or guiding perceptual reference to objects. We consider three extant models of the relation between perceptual attribution and perceptual reference–all attribution guides reference, no attribution guides reference, or a privileged subset of attributions guides reference–and argue that empirical evidence undermines all three. We then defend a flexible-attributives model, on which the range of perceptual attributives used to guide reference shifts adaptively (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   14 citations  
  27. Thinking and Perceiving: On the malleability of the mind.Dustin Stokes - 2021 - London: Routledge.
    [File is the introduction to the monograph] -/- Abstract to monograph -/- How and whether thinking affects perceiving is a deeply important question. Of course it is of scientific interest: to understand the human mind is to understand how we best distinguish its processes, how those processes interact, and what this implies for how and what we may know about the world. And so in the philosopher’s terms, this book is one on both mental architecture and the epistemology of perception. (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   27 citations  
  28. The perception/cognition distinction.Sebastian Watzl, Kristoffer Sundberg & Anders Nes - 2021 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 66 (2):165-195.
    ABSTRACT The difference between perception and cognition seems introspectively obvious in many cases. Perceiving and thinking have also been assigned quite different roles, in epistemology, in theories of reference and of mental content, in philosophy of psychology, and elsewhere. Yet what is the nature of the distinction? In what way, or ways, do perception and cognition differ? The paper reviews recent work on these questions. Four main respects in which perception and cognition have been held to differ are discussed. First, (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   15 citations  
  29. Mental Structures.Kevin Lande - 2020 - Noûs (3):649-677.
    An ongoing philosophical discussion concerns how various types of mental states fall within broad representational genera—for example, whether perceptual states are “iconic” or “sentential,” “analog” or “digital,” and so on. Here, I examine the grounds for making much more specific claims about how mental states are structured from constituent parts. For example, the state I am in when I perceive the shape of a mountain ridge may have as constituent parts my representations of the shapes of each peak and saddle (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   19 citations  
  30. A puzzle about seeing for representationalism.James Openshaw & Assaf Weksler - 2020 - Philosophical Studies 177 (9):2625-2646.
    When characterizing the content of a subject’s perceptual experience, does their seeing an object entail that their visual experience represents it as being a certain way? If it does, are they thereby in a position to have perceptually-based thoughts about it? On one hand, representationalists are under pressure to answer these questions in the affirmative. On the other hand, it seems they cannot. This paper presents a puzzle to illustrate this tension within orthodox representationalism. We identify several interesting morals which (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  31. Revisão de 'Seeing Things as They Are: a Theory of Perception' (Vendo as Coisas como são: uma Teoria da Percepção) (2015) (revisão revisada 2019).Michael Richard Starks - 2020 - In Entendendo as Conexões entre Ciência, Filosofia, Psicologia, Religião, Política, Economia, História e Literatura - Artigos e Avaliações 2006-2019. Las Vegas, NV USA: Reality Press. pp. 56-92.
    Como tantas vezes na filosofia, o título não só estabelece a linha de batalha, mas expõe os preconceitos e erros do autor, pois se podemos ou não entender o jogo de linguagem 'Ver as coisas como elas são' e se é possível ter uma "teoria filosófica" de percepção" (que é Pode ser sobre como a linguagem da percepção funciona), ao contrário de uma científica, que é uma teoria sobre como o cérebro funciona, são exatamente os problemas. Este é o Searle (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  32. On perceptual expertise.Dustin Stokes - 2020 - Mind and Language 36 (2):241-263.
    Expertise is a cognitive achievement that clearly involves experience and learning, and often requires explicit, time-consuming training specific to the relevant domain. It is also intuitive that this kind of achievement is, in a rich sense, genuinely perceptual. Many experts—be they radiologists, bird watchers, or fingerprint examiners—are better perceivers in the domain(s) of their expertise. The goal of this paper is to motivate three related claims, by substantial appeal to recent empirical research on perceptual expertise: Perceptual expertise is genuinely perceptual (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   18 citations  
  33. Perceptual skills.Dustin Stokes & Bence Nanay - 2020 - In Ellen Fridland & Carlotta Pavese, The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Skill and Expertise. New York, NY: Routledge.
    This chapter has four parts. I distinguishes some types of perceptual skills and highlights their importance in everyday perception. II identifies a well-studied class of perceptual skills: cases of perceptual expertise. III discusses a less studied possible instance of perceptual skill: picture perception. Finally, IV outlines some important mechanisms underlying perceptual skills, with special emphasis on attention and mental imagery.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  34. The role of experience in demonstrative thought.Michael Barkasi - 2019 - Mind and Language 34 (5):648-666.
    Attention plays a role in demonstrative thought: It sets the targets. Visual experience also plays a role. I argue here that it makes visual information available for use in the voluntary control of focal attention. To do so I use both introspection and neurophysiological evidence from projections between areas of attentional control and neural correlates of consciousness. Campbell and Smithies also identify roles for experience, but they further argue that only experience can play those roles. In contrast, I argue that (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  35. Phenomenal Intentionality and the Perception/Cognition Divide.Uriah Kriegel - 2019 - In Arthur Sullivan, Sensations, Thoughts, and Language: Essays in Honor of Brian Loar. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 167-183.
    One of Brian Loar’s most central contributions to contemporary philosophy of mind is the notion of phenomenal intentionality: a kind of intentional directedness fully grounded in phenomenal character. Proponents of phenomenal intentionality typically also endorse the idea of cognitive phenomenology: a sui generis phenomenal character of cognitive states such as thoughts and judgments that grounds these states’ intentional directedness. This combination creates a challenge, though: namely, how to account for the manifest phenomenological difference between perception and cognition. In this paper, (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  36. Perceptual Pluralism.Jake Quilty-Dunn - 2019 - Noûs 54 (4):807-838.
    Perceptual systems respond to proximal stimuli by forming mental representations of distal stimuli. A central goal for the philosophy of perception is to characterize the representations delivered by perceptual systems. It may be that all perceptual representations are in some way proprietarily perceptual and differ from the representational format of thought (Dretske 1981; Carey 2009; Burge 2010; Block ms.). Or it may instead be that perception and cognition always trade in the same code (Prinz 2002; Pylyshyn 2003). This paper rejects (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   80 citations  
  37. Is Iconic Memory Iconic?Jake Quilty-Dunn - 2019 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 101 (3):660-682.
    Short‐term memory in vision is typically thought to divide into at least two memory stores: a short, fragile, high‐capacity store known as iconic memory, and a longer, durable, capacity‐limited store known as visual working memory (VWM). This paper argues that iconic memory stores icons, i.e., image‐like perceptual representations. The iconicity of iconic memory has significant consequences for understanding consciousness, nonconceptual content, and the perception–cognition border. Steven Gross and Jonathan Flombaum have recently challenged the division between iconic memory and VWM by (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   17 citations  
  38. Thought about Properties: Why the Perceptual Case is Basic.Dominic Alford-Duguid - 2018 - Philosophical Quarterly 68 (271):221-242.
    This paper defends a version of the old empiricist claim that to think about unobservable physical properties a subject must be able to think perception-based thoughts about observable properties. The central argument builds upon foundations laid down by G. E. M. Anscombe and P. F. Strawson. It bridges the gap separating these foundations and the target claim by exploiting a neglected connection between thought about properties and our grasp of causation. This way of bridging the gap promises to introduce substantive (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  39. Visually Perceiving the Intentions of Others.Grace Helton - 2018 - Philosophical Quarterly 68 (271):243-264.
    I argue that we sometimes visually perceive the intentions of others. Just as we can see something as blue or as moving to the left, so too can we see someone as intending to evade detection or as aiming to traverse a physical obstacle. I consider the typical subject presented with the Heider and Simmel movie, a widely studied ‘animacy’ stimulus, and I argue that this subject mentally attributes proximal intentions to some of the objects in the movie. I further (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   26 citations  
  40. Attention and the Cognitive Penetrability of Perception.Dustin Stokes - 2018 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 96 (2):303-318.
    One sceptical rejoinder to those who claim that sensory perception is cognitively penetrable is to appeal to the involvement of attention. So, while a phenomenon might initially look like one where, say, a perceiver’s beliefs are influencing her visual experience, another interpretation is that because the perceiver believes and desires as she does, she consequently shifts her spatial attention so as to change what she senses visually. But, the sceptic will urge, this is an entirely familiar phenomenon, and it hardly (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   37 citations  
  41. On the explanatory power of hallucination.Dominic Alford-Duguid & Michael Arsenault - 2017 - Synthese 194 (5).
    Pautz has argued that the most prominent naive realist account of hallucination—negative epistemic disjunctivism—cannot explain how hallucinations enable us to form beliefs about perceptually presented properties. He takes this as grounds to reject both negative epistemic disjunctivism and naive realism. Our aims are two: First, to show that this objection is dialectically ineffective against naive realism, and second, to draw morals from the failure of this objection for the dispute over the nature of perceptual experience at large.
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   11 citations  
  42. (2 other versions)The Perception/Cognition Divide: One More Time, with Feeling.Uriah Kriegel - 2017 - In Limbeck-Lilienau Christoph & Stadler Friedrich, The Philosophy of Perception and Observation. Contributions of the 40th International Wittgenstein Symposium August 6-12, 2017 Kirchberg am Wechsel. Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society. pp. 149-170.
    Traditional accounts of the perception/cognition divide tend to draw it in terms of subpersonal psychological processes, processes into which the subject has no first-person insight. Whatever betides such accounts, there seems to also be some first-personally accessible difference between perception and thought. At least in normal circumstances, naïve subjects can typically tell apart their perceptual states from their cognitive or intellectual ones. What are such subjects picking up on when they do so? This paper is an inconclusive search for an (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   9 citations  
  43. Ambivalence, Emotional Perceptions, and the Concern with Objectivity.Hili Razinsky - 2017 - Symposion: Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences 4 (2):211-228.
    Hili Razinsky, free downlad at link. ABSTRACT: Emotional perceptions are objectivist (objectivity-directed or cognitive) and conscious, both attributes suggesting they cannot be ambivalent. Yet perceptions, including emotional perceptions of value, allow for strictly objectivist ambivalence in which a person unitarily perceives the object in mutually undermining ways. Emotional perceptions became an explicandum of emotion for philosophers who are sensitive to the unique conscious character of emotion, impressed by the objectivist character of perceptions, and believe that the perceptual account solves a (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  44. Cognitive penetration and the perception of colour.Dustin Stokes - 2017 - In Derek Brown & Fiona Macpherson, Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Colour. New York: Routledge.
    This chapter concerns the cognitive penetration of the visual experience of colour. Alleged cases of cognitively penetrated colour perception are of special import since they concern an uncontroversial type of visual experience. All theorists of perception agree that colour properties figure properly in the content or presentation of visual perception, even though not all parties agree that pine trees or causes or other "high-level" properties can figure properly in visual content or presentation. So an alleged case of this kind does (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  45. Noise, uncertainty, and interest: Predictive coding and cognitive penetration.Jona Vance & Dustin Stokes - 2017 - Consciousness and Cognition 47:86-98.
    This paper concerns how extant theorists of predictive coding conceptualize and explain possible instances of cognitive penetration. §I offers brief clarification of the predictive coding framework and relevant mechanisms, and a brief characterization of cognitive penetration and some challenges that come with defining it. §II develops more precise ways that the predictive coding framework can explain, and of course thereby allow for, genuine top-down causal effects on perceptual experience, of the kind discussed in the context of cognitive penetration. §III develops (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   19 citations  
  46. Perceptual Learning Explains Two Candidates for Cognitive Penetration.Valtteri Arstila - 2016 - Erkenntnis 81 (6):1151-1172.
    The cognitive penetrability of perceptual experiences has been a long-standing topic of disagreement among philosophers and psychologists. Although the notion of cognitive penetrability itself has also been under dispute, the debate has mainly focused on the cases in which cognitive states allegedly penetrate perceptual experiences. This paper concerns the plausibility of two prominent cases. The first one originates from Susanna Siegel’s claim that perceptual experiences can represent natural kind properties. If this is true, then the concepts we possess change the (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   25 citations  
  47. Object Files, Properties, and Perceptual Content.Santiago Echeverri - 2016 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 7 (2):283-307.
    Object files are mental representations that enable perceptual systems to keep track of objects as numerically the same. How is their reference fixed? A prominent approach, championed by Zenon Pylyshyn and John Campbell, makes room for a non-satisfactional use of properties to fix reference. This maneuver has enabled them to reconcile a singularist view of reference with the intuition that properties must play a role in reference fixing. This paper examines Campbell’s influential defense of this strategy. After criticizing it, a (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   10 citations  
  48. Indexing the World? Visual Tracking, Modularity, and the Perception–Cognition Interface.Santiago Echeverri - 2016 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 67 (1):215-245.
    Research in vision science, developmental psychology, and the foundations of cognitive science has led some theorists to posit referential mechanisms similar to indices. This hypothesis has been framed within a Fodorian conception of the early vision module. The article shows that this conception is mistaken, for it cannot handle the ‘interface problem’—roughly, how indexing mechanisms relate to higher cognition and conceptual thought. As a result, I reject the inaccessibility of early vision to higher cognition and make some constructive remarks on (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  49. Recent Issues in High-Level Perception.Grace Helton - 2016 - Philosophy Compass 11 (12):851-862.
    Recently, several theorists have proposed that we can perceive a range of high-level features, including natural kind features (e.g., being a lemur), artifactual features (e.g., being a mandolin), and the emotional features of others (e.g., being surprised). I clarify the claim that we perceive high-level features and suggest one overlooked reason this claim matters: it would dramatically expand the range of actions perception-based theories of action might explain. I then describe the influential phenomenal contrast method of arguing for high-level perception (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   57 citations  
  50. Inferentialism and cognitive penetration of perception.Jack C. Lyons - 2016 - Episteme 13 (1):1-28.
    Cognitive penetration of perception is the idea that what we see is influenced by such states as beliefs, expectations, and so on. A perceptual belief that results from cognitive penetration may be less justified than a nonpenetrated one. Inferentialism is a kind of internalist view that tries to account for this by claiming that some experiences are epistemically evaluable, on the basis of why the perceiver has that experience, and the familiar canons of good inference provide the appropriate standards by (...)
    Remove from this list   Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   27 citations  
1 — 50 / 74