£42.00
Perception and Knowledge
A Phenomenological Account
Overview
This book offers a provocative, clear and rigorously argued account of the nature of perception and its role in the production of knowledge. Walter Hopp argues that perceptual experiences do not have conceptual content, and that what makes them play a distinctive epistemic role is not the features which they share with beliefs, but something that in fact sets them radically apart.
Key Concepts
He explains that the reason-giving relation between experiences and beliefs is what Edmund Husserl called fulfilment - in which we find something to be as we think it to be.
Scope and Audience
His book covers a wide range of central topics in contemporary philosophy of mind, epistemology and traditional phenomenology. It is essential reading for contemporary analytic philosophers of mind and phenomenologists alike.