Border Between Seeing and Thinking

Border Between Seeing and Thinking

A Chronical of 500 Days

Block, Ned

Oxford University Press Inc

03/2023

560

Dura

Inglês

9780197622223

15 a 20 dias

Descrição não disponível.
Preface

1. Introduction
-Consciousness
-Pure Perception
-What is a joint?
-Constitutivity vs explanatory depth
-The contents of perception
-Realism about perceptual and cognitive representation
-Three-layer methodology
-Higher "capacity" in perception (whether conscious or not) than cognition
-Fragile visual short term memory
-Slot vs pool models
-Armchair approaches to the perception/cognition border
-Conceptual engineering
-Perceptual learning
-Superimposition of Imagery on Perception
-Cognitive states that use perceptual materials
-Dual component views
-Interface of perception with cognition
-Implications outside philosophy of mind
-Roadmap

2. Markers of the perceptual and the cognitive
-Adaptation
-Perception vs cognition in Language
-Different kinds of adaptation
-Visual hierarchy
-The use of adaptation in distinguishing low-level from high-level perception
-The use of adaptation in distinguishing perception from cognition
-Semantic satiation
-Rivalry
-Pop-out
-Interpolation of Illusory Contours
-Neural markers of perception and cognition
-Other markers of perception
-Phenomenology
-Summary

3. Two kinds of seeing-as and singular content
-Burge and Schellenberg on Singular Content
-Attribution and Discrimination
-Ordinary vs technical language
-Bias: perception vs perceptual judgment
-Evaluative perception

4. Perception is constitutively non-propositional and non-conceptual
-Concepts and propositions
-The non-propositional nature of perception
-Conjunction
-Negation
-Atomic propositional representations
-Rivalry and propositional perception
-How do iconicity, non-conceptuality and non-propositionality fit together?
-Laws of appearance
-Bayesian "inference"
-Bayesian realism

5. Perception is iconic; cognition is discursive
-Iconicity, format and function
-Iconicity and determinacy
-Structure
-Analog tracking and mirroring
-Analog magnitude representations
-Mental imagery
-Holism
-Integral vs Separable
-Iconic object-representations in perception
-Object files in working memory
-Memory involving perceptual representations
-Iconic memory
-Fragile visual short term memory
-Working memory
-Arguments against perceptual iconicity that are based on perception and memory of objects

6. Non-conceptual color perception
-Perceptual category representations
-Infant color categories
-Color Constancy
-Infants' failure to normally deploy color concepts
-Working memory again
-Experiments on babies' working memory representations
-Conceptual perceptual states
-Concepts and Consciousness
-Systematicity again
-Modality

7. Neural evidence that perception is non-conceptual
-"No-report" paradigm vs. "no-cognition" paradigm
-Another "no-report" paradigm

8. Evidence that is wrongly taken to show that perception is conceptual
-Fast perception
-Cognitive access to mid-level vision

9. Cognitive penetration is common but does not challenge the joint
-Cognitive impenetrability: Recent History
-Ambiguous stimuli
-Spatial attention
-Feature-based attention
-Dimension Restriction
-Mental Imagery

10. Top-down effects that are probably not cases of cognitive penetration
-Figure/ground
-Memory color

11. Modularity

12. Core cognition and perceptual analogs of concepts
-Perception of causation
-Core Cognition

13. Consciousness
-Phenomenal consciousness vs. access consciousness
-Global Workspace
-Higher Order Thought
-Alleged evidence for higher order thought theories of consciousness
-Prefrontalism and electrical stimulation of the brain
-Overflow
-Biological reductionism
-Direct awareness
-Teleological approaches
-Fading qualia
-Consciousness and free will

14. Conclusions

Bibliography
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