Readings on Color: The philosophy of colorAlex Byrne, David R. Hilbert |
Contents
On Some Criticisms of a Physicalist Theory of Colors | 1 |
Smart and the Secondary Qualities | 33 |
Reply to Armstrong | 47 |
An Objectivists Guide to Subjectivism about Colour | 67 |
Colour as a Secondary Quality | 81 |
Physicalist Theories of Color | 105 |
How to Speak of the Colors | 137 |
A Simple View of Colour | 177 |
The Autonomy of Colour | 191 |
Phenomenal Character | 227 |
Explaining Objective Color in Terms of Subjective Reactions | 247 |
Colors and Reflectances | 263 |
Reinverting the Spectrum | 289 |
Bibliography | 303 |
Other editions - View all
Readings on color: The science of color. Volume 2 Alex Byrne,David R. Hilbert No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
a-all account account of color after-image anthropocentric appear argue argument Armstrong beliefs blue Boghossian canary yellow causal cause chapter characterization claim color content color experience color properties color sensations D. M. Armstrong disjunctive dispositionalist distinction eliminativism ence example experience represents explanation fact fregean identify instantiated intrinsic introspective intuition inverted spectrum J. J. C. Smart kind look red mental metamerism microphysical properties nature nondisjunctive normal human normal observers one's orange Oxford particular perceivers perception phenomenal character phenomenology Philosophical physical properties physicalist possible present Primary Quality account problem projectivism property red qualia question red objects red-feeling experience reflect relation relevant representational content reveal rience russellian secondary qualities seems seen sense shade of yellow Shoemaker similar simply someone sort spectral standard standardly supervenient suppose surface Sydney Shoemaker things tion tomato true veridical viewing conditions vision visual experience visual field visual perception wavelength