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1
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85064030631
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Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press
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1992. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press
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(1992)
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4
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85064026697
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7–8. Peacocke's introductory sketch (7–8) is formulated in terms of his earlier theory of visual field sensational properties which was presented in
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Oxford: Clarendon Press, See (I have modified the sketch so that it is more consistent with and indicative of the approach he goes on to elaborate the current work, which is not committed to visual field sensational properties.,. In
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Peacocke. 1983. “ 7–8. Peacocke's introductory sketch (7–8) is formulated in terms of his earlier theory of visual field sensational properties which was presented in ”. In Sense and Content Oxford: Clarendon Press. See (I have modified the sketch so that it is more consistent with and indicative of the approach he goes on to elaborate in the current work, which is not committed to visual field sensational properties.
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(1983)
Sense and Content
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Peacocke1
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5
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85064021710
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Peacocke stresses that ‘there is no requirement… that the conceptual apparatus used specifying a way of filling out the space be an apparatus of concepts used by the perceiver himself. Any apparatus we want to use, however sophisticated, may be employed fixing the spatial type, however primitive the conceptual resources of the perceiver with whom we are concerned. This applies both to the apparatus used characterizing distances and directions, and to that employed characterizing the surfaces, features, and the rest’ (63
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Peacocke stresses that ‘there is no requirement… that the conceptual apparatus used in specifying a way of filling out the space be an apparatus of concepts used by the perceiver himself. Any apparatus we want to use, however sophisticated, may be employed in fixing the spatial type, however primitive the conceptual resources of the perceiver with whom we are concerned. This applies both to the apparatus used in characterizing distances and directions, and to that employed in characterizing the surfaces, features, and the rest’ (63).
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7
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0004248961
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London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, ‘Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind,’
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1963. Science, Perception and Reality London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ‘Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind,’ (
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(1963)
Science, Perception and Reality
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9
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85064026052
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Though I cannot elaborate the details, Peacocke endorses a complex account of the link between our experiential contents and action. According to this approach, nonconceptual contents are fixed in part by their links with action and so require at least a rudimentary form of first-person concept.
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Though I cannot elaborate the details, Peacocke endorses a complex account of the link between our experiential contents and action. According to this approach, nonconceptual contents are fixed in part by their links with action and so require at least a rudimentary form of first-person concept.
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10
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85064028656
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Hence, I am suggesting that the third principal motivation for positing nonconceptual contents— namely that of providing an explanation of experiential contents terms of subpersonal functioning— does not require us to posit nonconceptual contents at the experiential level. Nonconceptual contents might be posited at the subpersonal level as standing a causal enabling relation to experiential conceptual contents.Let me also indicate the way which the second principal motivation for positing nonconceptual contents within experience— namely the richly finegrained or determinate character of perceptual experience— can be explained terms of conceptual rather than nonconceptual contents. Though I cannot develop this position detail, the idea is straightforward. Demonstrative thought is fully conceptual and demonstrative thought may be predicative as well as singular. That is, demonstrative concepts can pick out properties such as or ‘that shape’ just as they can pick out individuals such as ‘that person’ or ‘that mountain.’ On the view that demonstratives involve the demonstrated individual or attribute their conditions of meaningfulness, demonstrative contents capture the exact determinate nature of the represented individuals or attributes. Hence, if I say ‘that jagged contour on that side ofthat mountain isnt as steep as this one on this side,’ I give linguistic expression to the fully determinate or fine-grained nature of my perceptual experience. Though descriptive contents and descriptive concepts cannot capture the character of perceptual experience, this does not show that demonstrative concepts that make-up demonstrative conceptual contents are similarly lacking. It is important to note that Peacocke does not find fault with this proposal. Rather, he holds that while it may be true that demonstrative conceptual contents are adequate to the fine grain of perceptual experience, nonconceptual protopropositional content is required order to explain such demonstrative conceptual contents non-circularly. But that is an application of the non-circularity constraint against which my paper has argued
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Hence, I am suggesting that the third principal motivation for positing nonconceptual contents— namely that of providing an explanation of experiential contents in terms of subpersonal functioning— does not require us to posit nonconceptual contents at the experiential level. Nonconceptual contents might be posited at the subpersonal level as standing in a causal enabling relation to experiential conceptual contents.Let me also indicate the way in which the second principal motivation for positing nonconceptual contents within experience— namely the richly finegrained or determinate character of perceptual experience— can be explained in terms of conceptual rather than nonconceptual contents. Though I cannot develop this position in detail, the idea is straightforward. Demonstrative thought is fully conceptual and demonstrative thought may be predicative as well as singular. That is, demonstrative concepts can pick out properties such as ‘that shade’ or ‘that shape’ just as they can pick out individuals such as ‘that person’ or ‘that mountain.’ On the view that demonstratives involve the demonstrated individual or attribute in their conditions of meaningfulness, demonstrative contents capture the exact determinate nature of the represented individuals or attributes. Hence, if I say ‘that jagged contour on that side ofthat mountain isn't as steep as this one on this side,’ I give linguistic expression to the fully determinate or fine-grained nature of my perceptual experience. Though descriptive contents and descriptive concepts cannot capture the character of perceptual experience, this does not show that demonstrative concepts that make-up demonstrative conceptual contents are similarly lacking. It is important to note that Peacocke does not find fault with this proposal. Rather, he holds that while it may be true that demonstrative conceptual contents are adequate to the fine grain of perceptual experience, nonconceptual protopropositional content is required in order to explain such demonstrative conceptual contents non-circularly. But that is an application of the non-circularity constraint against which my paper has argued.
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‘that shade’‘that shape’‘that person’‘that mountain.’‘that jagged contour on that side ofthat mountainthis one on this side,’
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