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The High Road to Phenomenalism

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Perception

Part of the book series: Problems of Philosophy ((PRPH))

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Abstract

In Chapter 2 I listed three objections to the account of perception which involves extending the causal chain beyond the brain. The first objection—that the sense-impression is said to be a modification of a non-extended substance the essence of which is thought, and yet is extended and is unlike a thought in that it is not true or false of anything—was met by making the essence of mind privacy, not thought.

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© 1971 G. N. A. Vesey

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Vesey, G. (1971). The High Road to Phenomenalism. In: Perception. Problems of Philosophy. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-01004-2_4

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