ABSTRACT

This volume addresses key questions related to how content in thought is derived from perceptual experience. It includes chapters that focus on single issues on perception and cognition, as well as others that relate these issues to an important social construct that involves both perceptual experience and cognitive activities: aesthetics. While the volume includes many diverse views, several prominent themes unite the individual essays: a challenge to the notion of the discreet, and non-temporal, unit of perception, a challenge to the traditional divide between perception and cognition, and a challenge to the traditional divide between unconscious and conscious intentionality. Additionally, the chapters discuss the content of perceptual experience, the value of traditional notions of content, disjunctivism, adverbialism, and phenomenal experience. The final section of essays dealing with perception and cognition in aesthetics features work in experimental aesthetics and unique perspectives from artists and gallerists working outside of philosophy. Perception, Cognition and Aesthetics is a timely volume that offers a range of unique perspectives on debates in philosophy of mind surrounding perception and cognition. It will also appeal to scholars working in aesthetics and art theory who are interested in the ways these debates influence our understanding of art.

part Section I|113 pages

Perception

chapter 1|16 pages

Disjunctivism and the Internal

A Problem for McDowell’s Epistemological Disjunctivism?

chapter 2|16 pages

Xenophanes’s Figs and Honey

An Essay about a Program of Philosophy of Perception

chapter 4|21 pages

Smelling Molecular Structure

part Section II|131 pages

Cognition

part Section III|91 pages

Perception and Cognition in Aesthetics

chapter 13|24 pages

Would You Buy Absence Art?

chapter 14|23 pages

Penetrating Beauty

Knowledge, Culture and Context in Aesthetic Perception

chapter 15|17 pages

Gist Experience

chapter 16|14 pages

How Do I Know When I Am Dancing?

chapter 17a|7 pages

Interview with James Cohan

chapter 17b|4 pages

Interview with Leonel Moura