
The Cognitive Penetrability of Perception
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Content
- The Cognitive Penetrability of Perception: An Overview
- I. DEFINITIONAL AND METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES
- 1: Edouard Machery: Cognitive Penetrability: A No-Progress Report
- 2: Dustin Stokes: Towards a Consequentialist Understanding of Cognitive Penetration
- II. MODULARITY, ENCAPSULATION AND IMPENETRABILITY
- 3: Jack C. Lyons: Unencapsulated Modules and Perceptual Judgment
- 4: Daniel Burnston and Jonathan Cohen: Perceptual Integration, Modularity, and Cognitive Penetration
- 5: Ophelia Deroy: Multisensory Perception and Cognitive Penetration: The Unity Assumption, Thirty Years After
- III. SUBSTANTIVE IMPENETRABILITY AND PENETRABILITY CLAIMS
- 6: Fred Dretske: Perception versus Conception: The Goldilocks Test
- 7: Robert Briscoe: Cognitive Penetration and the Reach of Phenomenal Content
- 8: Brad Mahon and Wayne Wu: Cognitive Penetration of the Dorsal Visual Stream?
- 9: Christopher Mole: Attention and Cognitive Penetration
- IV. COGNITIVE PENETRABILITY AND THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF PERCEPTION
- 10: Jérôme Dokic and Jean-Rémy Martin: Looks the same but feels different: A metacognitive approach to cognitive penetrability
- 11: Athanassios Raftopoulos: Cognitive Penetrability and Consciousness
- 12: John Zeimbekis: Seeing, Visualizing, and Believing: Pictures and Cognitive Penetration
- V. COGNITIVE PENETRABILITY AND NONCONCEPTUAL CONTENT
- 13: Fiona Macpherson: Cognitive Penetration and Nonconceptual Content
- VI. COGNITIVE PENETRABILITY AND REALISM
- 14: Jonathan Lowe: Perceptual Content, Cognitive Penetrability, and Realism
- 15: Costas Pagondiotis: Cognitive (Im)penetrability of Vision: Restricting Vision versus Restricting Cognition
- Afterword: Epistemic Evaluability and Perceptual Farce
- Index
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