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(1986) Roderick M. Chisholm, Dordrecht, Springer.

The objects of perception

Radu J Bogdan

pp. 135-156

Our perceptions, beliefs, thoughts and memories have objects. They are about or of things and properties around us. I perceive her, have beliefs about her, think of her and have memories of her. How are we to construe this aboutness (or ofness) of our cognitive states?1 There are four major choices on the philosophical market. There is an interaction approach which says that the object of cognition is fixed by and understood in terms of what cognizers physically and sensorily interact with — or, alternatively, in terms of what the information delivered by such interaction is about. There is the satisfactional approach which says that the object of a cognitive state is whatever satisfies the representation constitutive of that state. There is also a hybrid approach which requires both physical/sensory interaction and representational satisfaction in the fixation of the object of cognition. And there is, finally, the direct acquaintance approach which says that only an immediate cognitive contact with things and properties can establish them as objects of cognition.2 The latter, as far as I can tell, goes the way perception goes, so only the remaining three approaches look like serious contenders.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-2919-2_4

Full citation:

Bogdan, R. (1986)., The objects of perception, in R. J. . Bogdan (ed.), Roderick M. Chisholm, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 135-156.

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