Alien Experience
Alien Experience
Tumulty, Maura
Oxford University Press Inc
03/2020
304
Dura
Inglês
9780190845629
15 a 20 dias
554
Introduction
Chapter 1: Alien Experience
Section 1: Agency in attitudes-and experience?
Section 2: A sketch of alienated experience
Section 3: How could such endorsement or rejection be significant?
Section 4: Ways an agent can reject an experience
Section 5: Consequences and concerns
Chapter 2: Self-Control
Section 1: Judgment sensitivity
Section 2: Managerial self-control
Section 3: Distinctively first-personal managerial self-control
Section 4: Imagination and instrumental reasons
Section 5: Alienable experiences
Section 6: Will-power and obsession
Chapter 3: The Forensic Approach to Experience
Section 1: Alienation and false belief
Section 2: The forensic approach to experience
Section 3: A bit more about cognitive penetration
Section 4: What if the IAT research program is built on sand?
Section 5: Are we presupposing an ideal experience?
Chapter 4: Paths to Alienation
Section 1: Food, fit, fallacy
Section 2: Experiencing buildings
Section 3: Traces of atrocity
Section 4: Responding to troubling invitations
Chapter 5: Consequences for Philosophy of Perception
Section 1: Naive realism
Section 2: Hallucination and illusion
Section 3: Denying high-level properties
Section 4: The need for representation
Section 5: Wishful seeing
Introduction
Chapter 1: Alien Experience
Section 1: Agency in attitudes-and experience?
Section 2: A sketch of alienated experience
Section 3: How could such endorsement or rejection be significant?
Section 4: Ways an agent can reject an experience
Section 5: Consequences and concerns
Chapter 2: Self-Control
Section 1: Judgment sensitivity
Section 2: Managerial self-control
Section 3: Distinctively first-personal managerial self-control
Section 4: Imagination and instrumental reasons
Section 5: Alienable experiences
Section 6: Will-power and obsession
Chapter 3: The Forensic Approach to Experience
Section 1: Alienation and false belief
Section 2: The forensic approach to experience
Section 3: A bit more about cognitive penetration
Section 4: What if the IAT research program is built on sand?
Section 5: Are we presupposing an ideal experience?
Chapter 4: Paths to Alienation
Section 1: Food, fit, fallacy
Section 2: Experiencing buildings
Section 3: Traces of atrocity
Section 4: Responding to troubling invitations
Chapter 5: Consequences for Philosophy of Perception
Section 1: Naive realism
Section 2: Hallucination and illusion
Section 3: Denying high-level properties
Section 4: The need for representation
Section 5: Wishful seeing