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EPM: Chs III

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Title: EPM: Chs III


1
EPM Chs III IV
  • Pete Mandik
  • Chairman, Department of Philosophy
  • Coordinator, Cognitive Science Laboratory
  • William Paterson University, New Jersey USA

2
Ch III The Logic of Looks
  • Main idea the statement "X looks green to
    Jones" differs from "Jones sees that x is green"
    in that whereas the latter both ascribes a
    propositional claim to Jones' experience and
    endorses it, the former ascribes the claim but
    does not endorse it.

3
Spelling out the Logic of Looks Thesis
  • Situation 1 Jones wants to say that the tie is
    green and he believes viewing conditions to be
    normal so he says the tie is green.
  • Situation 2 Jones wants to say that the tie is
    green and he notices a weird light (and thus
    believes conditions to be abnormal) so he says
    the tie looks green.
  • Note that in situation 2, Jones must already have
    some prior grasp of the concepts of being green
    and normal conditions.

4
Advantages of the Logic of Looks Thesis
  1. it permits a parallel treatment of
    'qualitative' and 'existential' seeming or
    looking.
  2. it explains how things can have a merely
    generic look, a fact which would be puzzling
    indeed if looking red were a natural as opposed
    to an epistemic fact about objects.

5
it permits a parallel treatment of
'qualitative' and 'existential' seeming or
looking.
  • Qualitative seeming That tie looks green
  • Explanation you are sure there exists a tie but
    withhold endorsement of the claim that it has a
    green quality
  • Existential seeming It seems like there is a
    green tie
  • Explanation you withhold endorsement of whether
    there exists a tie yet alone whether what exists
    has a green quality

6
it explains how things can have a merely
generic look, a fact which would be puzzling
indeed if looking red were a natural as opposed
to an epistemic fact about objects.
  • A thing that is red is also a determinate shade
    of red
  • Something can seem red without seeming to be some
    determinate shade of red
  • You can endorse that a thing is red while being
    unsure which determinate shade it is

7
Entailment of the Logic of Looks Thesis
  • Contrary to Sense Datum Theory, it is false that
    some X looks green to Jones at time t entails
    that some Y is green at time t
  • There does not have to be a green sense datum in
    your mind for an illusion (a thing that is not
    green) to look green

8
X looks green to Jones entails
  • Jones is capable of grasping that he is disposed
    to say that X is green
  • Jones is capable of grasping that the current
    conditions are not normal (not the way in which
    things look the way they really are).

9
Therefore the concept of being green is
conceptually prior to the concept of looking
green.
10
Ch IV Explaining Looks
  • Main idea The fundamental grammar of the
    attribute red is
  • physical object x is red at place p and at time
    t.

11
Why?
  1. The sense of red in X looks red and X is
    red is the same sense. Sometimes things really
    are the way they look. So therefore whatever
    redness is involved in sensations is the same
    redness involved in physical objects.
  2. Whatever redness is involved in physical objects
    is conceptually more basic than whatever redness
    is involved in sensations because the way things
    are is conceptually prior to the way things look.

12
  • THE END
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