Readership: Scholars and students of the philosophy of mind and epistemology; cognitive psychologists
Edited by Tamar Szabo Gendler, Cornell University, New York, and John Hawthorne, Rutgers University, New Jersey
"The editors have assembled an impressive collection which deserves the attention of everyone interested in philosophical issues connected with perception." - Paul Coates The Philosophical Quarterly
"..an excellent collection of essays that shed light on the philosophical questions that many psychologists neglect. While philosophers have begun to refer more to the psychological literature, it is perhaps time that psychologists gain a better appreciation of the philosophical literature related to their areas of study...the essays, at times, may challenge psychologists to think of perception-related issues from a different perspective and with different terminology; nevertheless, it is an essential and thought-provoking challenge...an important volume to add to one's library on perception." - PsycCRITIQUES, Vol 52, No 9
Tamar Szabo Gendler and John Hawthorne: Introduction 1: John Campbell: Manipulating Colour 2: David J. Chalmers: Perception and the Fall from Eden 3: Tim Crane: Is there a Perceptual Relation? 4: Fred Dretske: Perception without Awareness 5: Anil Gupta: Experience and Knowledge 6: Susan Hurley: Active Perception and Perceiving Action: The Shared Circuits Model 7: Mark Johnston: The Function of Sensory Awareness 8: Geoffrey Lee: The Experience of Left and Right 9: Eric Lormand: Phenomenal Impressions 10: M. G. F. Martin: On Being Alienated 11: Alva Noe: Experience without the Head 12: Jesse J. Prinz: Beyond Appearances: The Content of Sensation and Perception 13: Sydney Shoemaker: On the Way Things Appear 14: Susanna Siegel: Which Properties are Represented in Perception? 15: Michael Tye: Nonconceptual Content, Richness, and Fineness of Grain