000 03113cam a22003254a 4500
001 15364749
003 BD-DhUL
005 20161115073101.0
008 080714s2009 mau b 001 0 eng
010 _a 2008030920
020 _a9780262012737 (hard cover : alk. paper)
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
_dDLC
_dBD-DhUL
050 0 0 _aB808.9
_b.T943 2009
082 0 0 _a126
_222
_bTYC
100 1 _aTye, Michael.
245 1 0 _aConsciousness revisited :
_bmaterialism without phenomenal concepts /
_cMichael Tye.
260 _aCambridge, MA :
_bMIT Press,
_cc2009.
300 _axiv, 229 p. ;
_c24 cm.
365 _aUSD
_b33.30
490 0 _aRepresentation and mind series
500 _a"A Bradford book."
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 _aIntroduction -- Phenomenal consciousness -- Phenomenal consciousness and self-representation -- The connection between phenomenal consciousness and creature consciousness -- Consciousness of things -- Real world puzzle cases -- Why consciousness cannot be physical and why it must be -- What is the thesis of physicalism? -- Why consciousness cannot be physical -- Why consciousness must be physical -- Physicalism and the appeal to phenomenal concepts -- Some terminological points -- Why physicalists appeal to phenomenal concepts -- Various accounts of phenomenal concepts -- My own earlier view on phenomenal concepts -- Are there any phenomenal concepts? -- Phenomenal concepts and burgean intuitions -- Consequences for a priori physicalism -- The admissible contents of visual experience : the existential thesis -- The singular (when filled) thesis -- Kaplanianism -- The multiple contents thesis -- The existential thesis revisited -- Still more on existential contents -- Consciousness, seeing and knowing -- Knowing things and knowing facts -- Nonconceptual content -- Why the phenomenal character of an experience is not one of its nonrepresentational properties -- Phenomenal character and representational content, part I -- Phenomenal character and representational content, part II -- Phenomenal character and our knowledge of it -- Solving the puzzles -- Mary, Mary, how does your knowledge grow? -- The explanatory gap -- The hard problem -- The possibility of zombies -- Change blindness and the refrigerator light illusion -- A closer look at the change blindness hypotheses -- The no-seeum view -- Sperling and the refrigerator light -- Phenomenology and cognitive accessibility -- A further change blindness experiment -- Another brick in the wall -- Privileged access, phenomenal character, and externalism -- The threat to privileged access -- A Burgean thought experiment -- Social externalism for phenomenal character? -- A closer look at privileged access and incorrigibility -- How do I know that I am not a zombie? -- Phenomenal externalism.
650 0 _aConsciousness.
650 0 _aPhenomenology.
650 0 _aMaterialism.
856 4 1 _3Table of contents only
_uhttp://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0824/2008030920.html
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