Perception and the Physical World |
Contents
ARGUMENTS TO PROVE THE SENSIBLE QUALITIES SUB | 3 |
WHAT ARE THE IMMEDIATE OBJECTS of AWARENESS | 19 |
1 We have no reason to believe in the existence of | 29 |
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accept acquiring of knowledge acquirings of beliefs actual admit affairs analysis of sensory argued Argument from Causation Argument from Illusion Argument from Verification belief or inclination Berkeley Berkeley's ceived ception chapter characteristics coherent colour concepts conditional statements Descartes difficulty Direct Realism distinction exist eyes false belief give an account H. H. Price hallucination Hume's Principle immediate object immediate perception immediate sensory illusion impressions inclination to believe J. J. C. Smart logically possible look means mediate perception menalist mind mirror mirror-images motion nature normal objects of perception observers ordinary pain Pheno Phenomenalism Phenomenalist physical objects physical reality physical world physicist's account primary qualities problem properties question Realist reason Representationalism Representative theory resemblance secondary qualities seems sensations sense sense-data sense-impres sense-impressions sense-organs sensible qualities simply sions smell sort sound spatial relations statements Suppose surface talk theory of perception tion true veridical perception word