Illusions, objectivity, and non-reductive emergentism: Reply to Rose

Tony Cheng*

*この研究の対応する著者

研究成果: Article査読

2 被引用数 (Scopus)

抄録

In the target article, David Rose makes an interesting and substantive case against a certain kind of sceptical view: “veridical perception is impossible in principle,” combined with a certain version of anti-realism. He proceeds by first illustrating several ideas from George Orwell’s seminal work, and then proposes that a certain kind of non-reductive, levelled emergentist metaphysics can help us respond to such scepticism. In this commentary, I join forces with Rose’s case, but will point out that we need to take seriously two discussions in contemporary philosophy in order to make the realist case stronger: the argument from illusion and hallucination, and the causal exclusion argument. Only then do Rose and his allies can have a more satisfactory case for objectivity and realism.

本文言語English
ページ(範囲)847-852
ページ数6
ジャーナルPerception
51
12
DOI
出版ステータスPublished - 2022 12月
外部発表はい

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • 実験心理学および認知心理学
  • 眼科学
  • 感覚系
  • 人工知能

フィンガープリント

「Illusions, objectivity, and non-reductive emergentism: Reply to Rose」の研究トピックを掘り下げます。これらがまとまってユニークなフィンガープリントを構成します。

引用スタイル