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Full Description
Most research on perception has focused on the perceptual experience of three-dimensional, solid, bounded, and coherent material objects - items like tables and tomatoes. But as well as having perceptual experience of such objects, we also experience such aspects of the world as, for instance, rainbows and surfaces, shadows and absences: things that are ephemeral by contrast with material objects. This book presents fifteen new essays on the perceptual experience of such ephemera. The editors' introduction provides a detailed guide to the topic as a whole, setting out the thematic background to this emerging area of research in contemporary philosophy of perception. The volume winds a path through the ephemeral, considering such topics as sounds, smells, transparency, reflection, camouflage, solidity, and ambient vision. A general aim of the volume is to make a case that the broad range of ephemera it catalogues is far from marginal, or insubstantial with respect to their philosophical interest and value. Philosophical attention to perceptul ephemera may well suggest novel routes to arriving at a more developed understanding of perceptual experience at large and its characteristic features.
Contents
1: Thomas Crowther and Clare Mac Cumhaill: A Tour of the Ephemeral
2: Matthew Soteriou: Sounds and Illusion
3: Matthew Nudds: The Unitary Nature of Sounds
4: Cain Todd: Representation and Ephemerality in Olfaction
5: Louise Richardson: Odours as Olfactibilia
6: Roy Sorensen: Spectacular Absences: A Companion Guide
7: Anna Farennikova: Disappearances
8: Roberto Casati: Shadows, Objects and the Lexicon
9: Ian Phillips: No More than Meets the Eye: Shadows as Pure Visibilia
10: Thomas Raleigh: On Silhouettes, Surfaces and Sorensen
11: Mark Eli Kalderon: Aristotle on Transparency
12: Vivian Mizrahi: Perceptual Media, Glass and Mirrors
13: Thomas Crowther: In Touch with the Look of Solidity
14: Clare Mac Cumhaill: Nonsense and Visual Evanescence
15: Mohan Matthen: Ephemeral Vision