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Table of contents :
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Sources and Abbreviations
Preface
Introduction
1 Kant: Sensibility, Perception, Reality
On Sensibility
Chapter Overview
Introduction
The Distinction between Sensibility and Understanding
A Distinct Faculty of Sensibility
Idealism and the Myth of the Given
Kant and the Myth of the Given
On Descartes, Idealism, and Reality
On the Noumenon
Kant’s Disjunctivism
McDowell on Kant and the Subjective Ideality of Space and Time
Concluding Remarks
2 Kant: Concepts, Deduction, Debates
The Contents of Intuition and Perception
Chapter Overview
Introduction
General Remarks on Synthesis
The Transcendental Deduction, A-Version Section 2
The Transcendental Deduction, A-Version Section 3
The Transcendental Deduction, Remarks on the B-Version
The Broader Picture: What Problem Does Kant’s Theory of Perception Address?
Kant and Contemporary Debates
Empirical or Category Conceptualism?
Reasons to Think Intuition and Perception have Non-Conceptual Content
The Independency Thesis
The Argument from Blind Intuitions and Kant’s Anthropology
The Argument from Incongruent Counterparts
Concluding Remarks
3 Husserl: Intentionality, Consciousness, Nature
Intentionality and Fulfillment
Chapter Overview
The Intentional Approach to Consciousness
On Sensation Contents
On Feelings and Dark Longings
On Fulfillment and Justified Belief
Husserl’s Critique of Kant’s Theory of Knowledge
The Space of Consciousness
Accessing Consciousness
On the Space of Consciousness
On Drawing the Line
On Descartes, Idealism, and Reality
Concluding Remarks
4 Husserl: Perception, Judgment, Habit
Sensing, Perceiving, Judging
Chapter Overview
Introduction
Fields of Sensations
Simple Apprehension and Perceptual Explication
Types of Conceptuality and Objects of Thought
Horizons, Habits, and Concepts in Perception
Revision: What is Perception? On the Kinesthetic System
On Habit
Kinesthetic Habit and the Constitution of Spatiality
Pre-Conceptual Norms and Habits in the Contents of Perception
Conceptual Capacities in Perception
Concluding Remarks
5 McDowell: Concepts, Perceptions, Debates
McDowell’s Conceptualism
Chapter Overview
Introduction
Conceptual Content
Reflections on Concepts in Perception in McDowell, Kant, and Husserl
Arguments for Non-Conceptual Content
Misinterpretations of McDowell: Psychology, Illusions, and Skillful Coping
Concluding Remarks
6 McDowell: Reasons, Nature, Reality
Reasons and Nature
Chapter Overview
The Space of Reasons and the Space of Nature
Remarks on Drawing the Line, Bildung, and Animal Consciousness
Reflections on the Mental and the Transcendental
Reasons and Nature: Kant, Husserl, and McDowell
On Reality and Idealism
On Descartes, Idealism, and Reality: Kant, Husserl, and McDowell
Further Remarks on Accessing Reality in Kant, Husserl, and McDowell
Concluding Remarks
Index