This collection of essays brings together research on sense modalities and spatial perception in a systematic and interdisciplinary way. It updates a long-standing philosophical fascination with this topic by incorporating theoretical and empirical research from cognitive science, neuroscience, and psychology.
This collection of essays brings together research on sense modalities in general and spatial perception in particular in a systematic and interdisciplinary way. It updates a long-standing philosophical fascination with this topic by incorporating theoretical and empirical research from cognitive science, neuroscience, and psychology. The book is divided thematically to cover a wide range of established and emerging issues. Part I covers notions of objectivity and subjectivity in spatial perception and thinking. Part II focuses on the canonical distal senses, such as vision and audition. Part III concerns the chemical senses, including olfaction and gustation. Part IV discusses bodily awareness, peripersonal space, and touch. Finally, the volume concludes with Part V on multimodality. Spatial Senses is an important contribution to the scholarly literature on the philosophy of perception that takes into account important advances in the sciences.
Preface |
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x | |
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Introduction: Sensing in and of Space |
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1 | (6) |
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PART I Twenty-First-Century Oxford Kantianism, or: Transcendental Philosophy Naturalised? |
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7 | (40) |
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1 Strawson and Evans on Objectivity and Space |
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9 | (22) |
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2 Is Balint's Syndrome a Counterexample of the Kantian Spatiality Thesis? |
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31 | (16) |
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PART II Perceptual Magnitudes, Phenomenal Space, and Frames of Reference |
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47 | (58) |
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3 Spatial Perception, Magnitudes, and Analogue Representation |
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49 | (21) |
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4 Wittgenstein, Spatial Phenomenology, and "The Private Language Argument" |
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70 | (22) |
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5 The Two-Visual-Systems Hypothesis and the View From Here |
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92 | (13) |
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PART III Sounds, Smells, and Space |
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105 | (76) |
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6 Why Space Matters to an Understanding of Sound |
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107 | (18) |
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7 Smellscapes: A Neurobiological and Ecological Perspective |
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125 | (23) |
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8 The Many Problems of Distal Olfactory Perception |
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148 | (22) |
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9 Spatial Awareness and the Chemical Senses |
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170 | (11) |
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181 | (68) |
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10 Spatial Certainty: Feeling Is the Truth |
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183 | (16) |
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11 Peripersonal Space: Its Functions, Plasticity, and Neural Basis |
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199 | (27) |
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12 On the Very Idea of a Tactile Field, or: A Plea for Skin Space |
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226 | (23) |
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PART V Molyneux's Question and Multimodality |
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249 | (81) |
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13 Objectivity and Unity Across the Modalities: Molyneux's Question Revisited |
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251 | (23) |
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14 Molyneux's Question Within and Across the Senses |
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274 | (10) |
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15 Evaluating the Spatial Rule of Multisensory Integration: When Exactly Does Spatial Coincidence Matter? |
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284 | (23) |
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16 The Inside-Out Binding Problem |
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307 | (23) |
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List of Contributors |
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330 | (5) |
Index |
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335 | |
Tony Cheng is a Ph.D. Candidate at University College London, UK. His works have been published in Phenomenology and Cognitive Sciences, Philosophical Investigations, Philosophical Psychology, and Trends in Cognitive Sciences.
Ophelia Deroy holds the Chair in Philosophy of Mind at Ludwig-Maximilians University, Germany, and is also the Deputy Director of the Institute of Philosophy at the University of London, UK. Her work has appeared in Multisensory Research, Philosophical Studies, and the Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Perception, and she is the editor of Sensory blending: on synaesthesia and related phenomena.
Charles Spence is Professor of Experimental Psychology and Head of the Crossmodal Research Laboratory at the University of Oxford, UK. He is the co-author of In touch with the future: The sense of touch from cognitive neuroscience to virtual reality (2014), and also the author of various other books. He has hundreds of papers in high-profile journals.