Epigraphs |
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ix | |
Introduction |
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1 | (8) |
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Part I The Priority of Attention |
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9 | (28) |
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9 | (5) |
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The Agent-Causal Self Denied |
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14 | (9) |
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Attention as Mental Action |
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23 | (6) |
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Buddhaghosa's Attentionalism |
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29 | (8) |
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37 | (20) |
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37 | (10) |
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47 | (3) |
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50 | (7) |
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57 | (28) |
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Intentionality is Irreducible |
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57 | (5) |
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62 | (5) |
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67 | (5) |
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72 | (4) |
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A World Normatively Alive |
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76 | (9) |
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Part II Attention and Knowledge |
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4 The Content of Perceptual Experience |
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85 | (24) |
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Mindedness and the Epistemic Role of Experience |
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85 | (4) |
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Does Linguistic Capability Pervade Experience? |
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89 | (1) |
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Felt Evaluation and Action Solicitation |
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90 | (6) |
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Labelling and Cognitive Access |
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96 | (6) |
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Phenomenal Quality Overflows Cognitive Access |
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102 | (3) |
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105 | (4) |
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109 | (21) |
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The Two Roles of Attention |
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109 | (9) |
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Thinking-Of and Thinking-Through |
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118 | (3) |
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Attention and Perceiving-As |
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121 | (3) |
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Perspective and Object Files |
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124 | (6) |
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6 Attention and Knowledge |
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130 | (29) |
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Attentional Justification |
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130 | (8) |
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138 | (5) |
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Attention and Imagination |
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143 | (3) |
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Attention, Knowledge, and Expertise |
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146 | (13) |
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Part III The Calling of Attention |
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159 | (22) |
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159 | (2) |
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Can the Puzzle be Dissolved? |
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161 | (5) |
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Does the Puzzle Trade on an Ambiguity? |
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166 | (3) |
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169 | (7) |
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Crossmodality and Subliminal Orienting |
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176 | (5) |
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181 | (11) |
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181 | (4) |
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Primary Visual Acknowledgement |
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185 | (3) |
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Subliminal Seeing and Phenomenal Quality |
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188 | (4) |
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192 | (9) |
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Why Mind is not an Internal Sense |
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192 | (1) |
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Low-Level Mind: Forerunning |
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193 | (2) |
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High-Level Mind: Inter-Cognizing |
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195 | (2) |
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Top-Down Effects on the Modules of Mind |
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197 | (4) |
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10 Working Memory and Attention |
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201 | (20) |
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201 | (2) |
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203 | (6) |
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Internal Monitoring Denied |
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209 | (2) |
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The Theatre Simile Reworked |
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211 | (4) |
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Attention: Window not Spotlight |
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215 | (6) |
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Part IV Attention Expanded |
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11 Varieties of Attention |
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221 | (21) |
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Attention is not a Natural Psychological Kind |
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221 | (4) |
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225 | (5) |
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Introspection as Attention |
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230 | (2) |
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232 | (4) |
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236 | (3) |
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239 | (3) |
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242 | (27) |
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242 | (5) |
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Episodic Memory as Attention |
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247 | (6) |
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Autonoetic Consciousness and Ownership |
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253 | (9) |
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Episodic Memory and Reflexive Mental Files |
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262 | (7) |
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269 | (24) |
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Empathy: The Awareness of Others as Others |
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269 | (3) |
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272 | (5) |
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Empathy as Experiential Access |
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277 | (4) |
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Testimony and Imagination |
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281 | (3) |
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Empiricism in the Philosophy of Mind |
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284 | (9) |
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Part V Attention and Identity |
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293 | (21) |
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293 | (2) |
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The Concept of a Living Being |
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295 | (4) |
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Persons as Loci of Value and Significance |
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299 | (5) |
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Disgust: An Immune System for Cognition |
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304 | (3) |
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On the Ecotonality of Mind and Life |
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307 | (3) |
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Craving as Autonoetic Longing |
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310 | (4) |
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314 | (15) |
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Oneself as Object of Another's Attention |
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314 | (4) |
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Phenomenology and the Normative |
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318 | (4) |
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Individualism and Impersonalism Rejected |
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322 | (7) |
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329 | (12) |
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329 | (2) |
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Self-Narratives and Survival |
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331 | (3) |
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Attending to What Matters at the End of Life |
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334 | (7) |
Postscript: Philosophy Without Borders |
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341 | (8) |
Acknowledgements |
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349 | (2) |
List of Figures and Boxes |
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351 | (2) |
Bibliography |
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353 | (34) |
Index |
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387 | |