Readership: Scholars and graduate students in philosophy and cognitive psychology.
John Campbell, Wilde Professor of Mental Philosophy, Oxford University
"This is important work which should be widely read." - The Philosophical Quarterly
"... this book is an exciting contribution to an area which urgently needs a new sense of direction. Campbell has opened up an original set of problems and has identified links between subjects that have been pursued independently, to the impoverishment of each." - The Philosophical Quarterly
"This is the most striking and interesting of the long series of recent books on consciousness. Refreshingly, it has absolutely nothing to say about the philosophical preoccupations standard in this area." - The Philosophical Quarterly
"Campbell has many important things to say about the mechanisms that relate perception to action, memory and our awareness of space. All readers will be able to learn from his treatment of these issues." - David Papineau, Times Literary Supplement
Introduction 1: Experiential Highlighting 2: What is Knowledge of Reference? 3: Space and Action 4: Sortals 5: Sense 6: The Relational View of Experience 7: The Explanatory Role of Consciousness 8: Joint Attention 9: Memory Demonstratives 10: The Anti-Realist Alternative 11: Indeterminacy and Inscrutability 12: Dispositional vs. Categorical Bibliography Index