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8. The Adverbial Theory of Perception
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Content v
- Preface vii
- Preamble ix
-
I. Of Consciousness and Other Things
- 1. What consciousness is 1
- 2. The Continuity of Consciousness 9
- 3. Judgement 20
- 4. Desire and Will 26
- 5. Past and Future 30
- 6. The Method and the Goal of Metaphysics 33
-
2. Various Conceptions of Physical Reality and their Common Upshot
- Introduction 39
- I. Naive Realism 43
- 2. Subjective Idealism 45
- 3. Naive Scientism 47
- 4. Critical Scientism 48
- 5. Phenomenalism 51
- 6. Phenomenalist Instrumentalism 65
- 7. The Physical Thing as Concrete Universal 67
- 8. The Adverbial Theory of Perception 81
- 3 The Vindication of Panpsychism 85
- First argument for panpsychism: It is superior to any other answer ever offered to a certain question which is evidently meaningful 87
- Second argument for panpsychism : It makes the mind-body relationship more intelligible 96
- Third argument for panpsychism: It rightly takes as our clue to the nature of noumenal reality in general the one initial example we have of it 105
- Fourth argument for panpsychism: There is no conceivable sort of concrete actuality but sentience 110
- Some objections to the fourth argument considered 131
-
4. The Sentience of the Whole and the Sentience of the Parts
- Introduction 141
-
5. Relations
- 1. Properties and Individual Essences 162
- 2. Ideal Relations 180
- 3. Holistic Relations 187
- 4· 'Prehending' and 'Objectification' 225
- 5. The Question of External Relations 232
- 6. Concluding Remark on the Status of Relations 247
-
6. The Absolute
- 1. Main Conclusion 250
- 2. The Compounding of Consciousness 253
- 3. Judgement again, Memory and Causal Influence 264
- 4. Types of Monism 271
- Notes 280
- Index 286
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Content v
- Preface vii
- Preamble ix
-
I. Of Consciousness and Other Things
- 1. What consciousness is 1
- 2. The Continuity of Consciousness 9
- 3. Judgement 20
- 4. Desire and Will 26
- 5. Past and Future 30
- 6. The Method and the Goal of Metaphysics 33
-
2. Various Conceptions of Physical Reality and their Common Upshot
- Introduction 39
- I. Naive Realism 43
- 2. Subjective Idealism 45
- 3. Naive Scientism 47
- 4. Critical Scientism 48
- 5. Phenomenalism 51
- 6. Phenomenalist Instrumentalism 65
- 7. The Physical Thing as Concrete Universal 67
- 8. The Adverbial Theory of Perception 81
- 3 The Vindication of Panpsychism 85
- First argument for panpsychism: It is superior to any other answer ever offered to a certain question which is evidently meaningful 87
- Second argument for panpsychism : It makes the mind-body relationship more intelligible 96
- Third argument for panpsychism: It rightly takes as our clue to the nature of noumenal reality in general the one initial example we have of it 105
- Fourth argument for panpsychism: There is no conceivable sort of concrete actuality but sentience 110
- Some objections to the fourth argument considered 131
-
4. The Sentience of the Whole and the Sentience of the Parts
- Introduction 141
-
5. Relations
- 1. Properties and Individual Essences 162
- 2. Ideal Relations 180
- 3. Holistic Relations 187
- 4· 'Prehending' and 'Objectification' 225
- 5. The Question of External Relations 232
- 6. Concluding Remark on the Status of Relations 247
-
6. The Absolute
- 1. Main Conclusion 250
- 2. The Compounding of Consciousness 253
- 3. Judgement again, Memory and Causal Influence 264
- 4. Types of Monism 271
- Notes 280
- Index 286