
Contents
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Overview Overview
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7.1 The Issue of Attribution 7.1 The Issue of Attribution
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7.1.1 Preliminaries: A Simple Representational Theory 7.1.1 Preliminaries: A Simple Representational Theory
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7.1.2 The Complexity of Color Experience 7.1.2 The Complexity of Color Experience
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7.1.3 A Complex Representational Theory 7.1.3 A Complex Representational Theory
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7.2 Color Relationism and Relationism in General 7.2 Color Relationism and Relationism in General
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7.2.1 The Access Intuition 7.2.1 The Access Intuition
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7.2.2 Two Ancient Metaphors 7.2.2 Two Ancient Metaphors
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7.3 Stand-alone Adverbialism 7.3 Stand-alone Adverbialism
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7.4 False Color 7.4 False Color
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7.4.1 Ecologically Relevant Misperception 7.4.1 Ecologically Relevant Misperception
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7.4.2 Textbook “Illusions ” 7.4.2 Textbook “Illusions ”
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7.4.3 Disagreement 7.4.3 Disagreement
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter addresses some obvious objections to color adverbialism which arise from considering the dominant theories within the philosophy of perception, such as the problem of perceptual error. The motivations for color adverbialism stem largely from consideration of the theoretical commitments and conceptual needs of perceptual science. As such, the theory is not intended as an ontology which will make sense of ordinary color discourse, or as an analysis of color visual experience. However, it is still beneficial to see how it stands with respect to such doctrines in the philosophy of perception as representationalism and naïve realism. In this chapter it is argued that color adverbialism is compatible with versions of representational and naïve realist theories, and that it has the resources to distinguish examples usually classified as color illusions from instances of veridical perception.
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