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DPSL

Humanities || Philosophy

Perception

Author: Howard Robinson

Master eBook ISBN10 : 0-203-16435-0

Master eBook ISBN13 : 978-0-203-16435-8

No of pages : 272

eBook Price : $42.95

Originally Published : 18 Jan 2001

Howard Robinson's controversial yet accessible introduction surveys this major topic in epistemology and philosophy of mind. The discussion covers perception theory from Descartes and the empiricists through Wittgenstein on privacy to contemporary physicalist theories. The focus, however, is on the sense-datum theory of perception. Robinson concludes that, despite attacks over the years, a modified version of this theory is essentially correct, overturning the consensus that has dominated the philosophy of perception for nearly half a century.



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Table of contents : Preface 1. The Classical Empiricist Conception of the Content of Perceptual Experience 2. The Traditional Arguments for the Empiricist Conception of Sense-Contents: the Argument from Illusion 3. Further Arguments against Naive Realism 4. Sense-Data and the Anti-Private-Language-Argument 5. Contemporary Physicalist Theories of Perception 6. The Revised - and Successful - Causal Argument for Sense-Data 7. The Intentional and Adverbial Theories 8. The Nature of Sense-Data 9. Sense-data and the Physical World


Quotes

"Robinson presents ..[his].. argument, in both its constructive and critical aspects, with great skill. It is very valuable to have a defence of sense data by someone who is well acquainted with and has thought deeply about, recent criticisms and alternatives ... anyone interested in the philosophy of perception should read this book and consider it." - Times Literary Supplement

"Howard Robinson's book brings boldly forward the challenges that have been mounting against one of the most if not the most entrenched of received opinions, namely, the discountenancing of any notion of an internal sensory experience. An incisive and near-comprehensive survey of the opposing arguments from a phenomenalist position." - European Journal of Philosophy

"It presents a battery of considerations which should provoke theorists who are dismissive of sense-datum theory to review the details of their position, and it helpfully brings together neglected material from the literature." - Philosophical Quarterly

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