Results for 'Immediate experience'

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  1.  57
    XI*—Immediate Experience.Paul Gilbert - 1992 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 92 (1):233-250.
    Paul Gilbert; XI*—Immediate Experience, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 92, Issue 1, 1 June 1992, Pages 233–250, https://doi.org/10.1093/aristot.
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  2. Psychology versus immediate experience.Edward Chace Tolman - 1935 - Philosophy of Science 2 (3):356-80.
    In this paper I am going to try to indicate my notion concerning the nature and subject-matter of psychology. I am a behaviorist. I hold that psychology does not seek descriptions and intercommunications concerning immediate experience per se. Such descriptions and attempts at direct intercommunications may be left to the arts and to metaphysics. Psychology seeks, rather, the objectively stateable laws and processes governing behavior. Organisms, human and sub-human, come up against environmental stimulus situations and to these stimulus (...)
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  3.  38
    Immediate Experience, Mystical ‘Encounters’ and the ‘Voice’ of God: Palmquist’s Critical Mysticism and Kant’s Theory of Experience.Lawrence Pasternack - 2021 - Kantian Review 26 (1):129-135.
    In this brief commentary, I focus on Part II of Kant and Mysticism, where Stephen Palmquist explores the space for mystical experience in Kant. In particular, I focus on what Palmquist calls ‘immediate experience’ or ‘encounters’; what he calls the ‘supervening’ of religious experience on ordinary experience; and moral conscience as the ‘voice’ of God.
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  4.  54
    Symposium: Immediate Experience.G. Dawes Hicks, Beatrice Edgell & G. C. Field - 1929 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 9 (1):172 - 225.
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  5.  31
    James and Bradley on Immediate Experience.Evlyn Fortier - 1999 - Bradley Studies 5 (2):126-138.
    Immediate experience is not, currently, a fashionable topic in philosophy. Few, if any, contemporary philosophers offer commentaries on, or discussions of, immediate experience, especially the conception of it that was generally accepted in the early part of the twentieth century. Immediate experience has come to be identified with the immediately given and since ‘the given’ has been labelled a myth, immediate experience shares its fate.
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  6.  31
    Immediate Experience and Ontology.Nicholas Rescher - 2004 - Journal of Philosophical Research 29:113-124.
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  7.  44
    Immediate experience.D. A. Piatt - 1928 - Journal of Philosophy 25 (18):477-492.
  8. Immediate experience: Its nature and content.Louis Arnaud Reid - 1930 - Mind 39 (154):154-174.
  9. Time, Passage and Immediate Experience.Barry Dainton - 2011 - In Craig Callender (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Time. Oxford University Press. pp. 382.
  10. Bergson on the immediate experience of time.Yaron Wolf - 2021 - In Yaron Wolf & Mark Sinclair (eds.), Bergsonian Mind. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 55-71.
    Bergson’s influential discussion of durée—the concept at the heart of his dynamic view of time’s reality—emerges from an inquiry into the nature of temporal experience. In this chapter, I outline Bergson’s view of the non-inferential or immediate experience of time, and mark out the place of durée within his account. I underscore the relation between Bergson’s controversial argument concerning number and his view of temporal experience, and contrast Bergson’s notion of ‘immediate experience’ with immediacy (...)
     
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  11.  12
    Immediate Experience and Mediation.Harold H. Joachim - 1920 - Philosophical Review 29:480.
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  12.  15
    The Description of Immediate Experience.David G. Stern - 1995 - In Wittgenstein on mind and language. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The first section of this chapter presents a close reading of Wittgenstein’s “Remarks on Logical Form”, focusing on the conception of the relationship between language and experience, and the nature of the analysis of immediate experience that are set out there. Section two sets out an interpretation of what Wittgenstein meant when he said that he had rejected “phenomenological language” or “primary language” as his goal. Distinguishing between a weak and a strong sense of these terms shows (...)
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  13. How to analyze immediate experience: Hintikka, Husserl, and the idea of phenomenology.Søren Overgaard - 2008 - Metaphilosophy 39 (3):282-304.
    This article discusses Jaakko Hintikka's interpretation of the aims and method of Husserl's phenomenology. I argue that Hintikka misrepresents Husserl's phenomenology on certain crucial points. More specifically, Hintikka misconstrues Husserl's notion of "immediate experience" and consequently fails to grasp the functions of the central methodological tools known as the "epoché" and the "phenomenological reduction." The result is that the conception of phenomenology he attributes to Husserl is very far from realizing the philosophical potential of Husserl's position. Hence if (...)
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  14.  57
    (1 other version)Cognitive thought and 'immediate' experience.Joseph A. Leighton - 1906 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 3 (7):174-180.
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  15. (1 other version)On our knowledge of immediate experience.Francis H. Bradley - 1909 - Mind 18 (69):40-64.
  16. (1 other version)The appeal to immediate experience.Robert Donald Mack - 1945 - New York,: King's crown press.
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  17.  10
    The Appeal to Immediate Experience: Philosophic Method in Bradley Whitehead and Dewey.Robert Donald Mack - 2015 - New York,: Forgotten Books.
    Excerpt from The Appeal to Immediate Experience: Philosophic Method in Bradley Whitehead and Dewey The insight and guidance of Professor John Herman Randall, Jr. have made this book possible. Rather than merely acknowledge my debt to him I would like to express my gratitude here for his unfailing kindness, his penetrating criticism of my efforts, and the help he has given me in clarifying the complex problems of this subject-matter. I wish also to acknowledge the kindness of the (...)
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  18.  11
    (2 other versions)The Appeal to Immediate Experience.Robert D. Mack - 1945 - Philosophy of Science 12 (3):227-228.
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  19.  56
    The private field of immediate experience.Daniel Cory - 1939 - Journal of Philosophy 36 (16):421-427.
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  20. Introduction: On Some Varieties of Immediate Experience - Between Wittgenstein and Pragmatism.Anna Boncompagni & Roberta Dreon - 2018 - Pragmatism Today 2 (9):5-8.
    Introduction to the Special Issue "Varieties of Immediate Experience: Between Wittgenstein and Pragmatism".
     
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  21.  12
    The Appeal to Immediate Experience. By Robert D. Mack King's Crown Press, New York, 86 pp., $1.25.M. M. W. - 1945 - Philosophy of Science 12 (3):227-228.
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  22.  14
    The Appeal to Immediate Experience[REVIEW]C. A. V. - 1945 - Journal of Philosophy 42 (14):391-392.
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  23. (1 other version)Temptations of Purity: Phenomenological Language and Immediate Experience.Mihai Ometiță - 2023 - In Florian Franken Figueiredo (ed.), Forthcoming (March 2023): _Wittgenstein’s Philosophy in 1929_. New York: Routledge.
    In manuscripts from 1929, Wittgenstein envisaged a phenomenological language as a means to describe the experience of objects, alternative to an account of experienced objects provided by ordinary language - but the project failed. The chapter addresses that failure and its significance to philosophical methodology. Wittgenstein acknowledges that the ideal of a non-hypothetical description of immediate experience tempted not only him, but also other philosophers. The chapter traces an itinerary to his concerns that the fulfilment of that (...)
     
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  24.  53
    Reports of immediate experiences.J. J. C. Smart - 1971 - Synthese 22 (3-4):346-359.
  25. Perception, knowledge, and language-Plato and Wittgenstein on the description of the immediate experience.B. Schmitz - 2003 - Philosophisches Jahrbuch 110 (2):257-272.
     
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  26. Avowals of immediate experience.Raymond D. Bradley - 1964 - Mind 73 (April):186-203.
  27.  20
    Buddhist-Christian Dialogue in Japan: Varieties of Immediate Experience.Seiichi Yagi - 1994 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 14:11.
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  28.  72
    William James on a phenomenological psychology of immediate experience: The true foundation for a science of consciousness?Eugene Taylor - 2010 - History of the Human Sciences 23 (3):119-130.
    Throughout his career, William James defended personal consciousness. In his Principles of Psychology (1890), he declared that psychology is the scientific study of states of consciousness as such and that he intended to presume from the outset that the thinker was the thought. But while writing it, he had been investigating a dynamic psychology of the subconscious, which found a major place in his Gifford Lectures, published as The Varieties of Religious Experience in 1902. This was the clearest statement (...)
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  29.  47
    Book Review:The Appeal to Immediate Experience Robert D. Mack. [REVIEW]M. M. W. - 1947 - Philosophy of Science 14 (1):103-.
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  30.  66
    F.H.Bradley and the Doctrine of Immediate Experience.K. H. Sievers - 2002 - Bradley Studies 8 (1):41-82.
    The concept of experience has been central to European philosophy since Descartes. He was the first to use experience to distinguish between two kinds of substance, mental and material, on the basis of the fact that one kind of substance is extended but does not think, while the other kind thinks, doubts, wills, imagines and feels, but is not extended. Other philosophers, such as Hobbes, Locke and Hume, made the concept of experience the basis of their analysis (...)
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  31.  16
    The New Idealistic Movement in Philosophy.Immediate Experience and Mediation.H. Wildon Carr & Harold H. Joachim - 1920 - Philosophical Review 29 (5):503-504.
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  32.  24
    Les variations de l’expérience morale immédiate.Georges Gurvitch - 1937 - Travaux du IXe Congrès International de Philosophie 11:39-44.
    Une des caractéristiques de l’expérience morale immédiate est sa variabilité particulièrement intense, liée à la mobilité créatrice de ses données qui sont disposées en trois paliers de profondeur. On peut distinguer six aspects fondamentaux de ces variations : 1° variations des données en elles-mêmes ; 2° variations des actes qui les saisissent, indépendantes des variations des données ; 3° variations dans l’actualité des trois couches superposées des données ; 4° variations de l’équilibre mobile entre le mode collectif et le mode (...)
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  33. L'Expérience générale et l'Expérience immédiate. [REVIEW]A. Darbon - 1935 - Philosophy Today 9:23.
     
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  34.  38
    Art history and the immediate visual experience.James R. Johnson - 1961 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 19 (4):401-406.
  35. Are Introspective Beliefs about One’s Own Visual Experiences Immediate?Wolfgang Barz - 2018 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 95 (1).
    The aim of this paper is to show that introspective beliefs about one’s own current visual experiences are not immediate in the sense that what justifies them does not include other beliefs that the subject in question might possess. The argument will take the following course. First, the author explains the notions of immediacy and truth-sufficiency as they are used here. Second, the author suggests a test to determine whether a given belief lacks immediacy. Third, the author applies this (...)
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  36.  39
    Aesthetic Experience and the Unfathomable: A Pragmatist Critique of Hermeneutic Aesthetics.Mark Gilks - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (2):185-198.
    In his attack on the notion of immediate experience, Hans-Georg Gadamer argues that aesthetic experience should be absorbed into hermeneutics because alone it cannot account for the historical nature of experience ; predicated on an ontological theory of art, the unfathomable, therefore, is the sense we have of these infinite hermeneutic depths. I argue that this account is methodologically and existentially unacceptable: methodologically because it is overly speculative, and existentially because it betrays authentic existence. I critique (...)
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  37. The Immediate Object of Perception: A Sense-datum.Mika Suojanen - 2017 - Turku: Reports from the Department of Philosophy.
    The question of what we immediately perceive from the first-person point of view has been an issue of philosophizing since the beginning of Western philosophy. However, many philosophers have not considered all theoretical and practical consequences concerning identity and causation in perceptual experience between a perceiver and the external world. Despite their meritorious studies, philosophers have failed to completely understand how the causal series of events affects what we immediately experience. Using facts relating to perceivers, logical reasoning, introspection, (...)
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  38.  16
    Experience and meaning in music performance.Martin Clayton, Byron Dueck & Laura Leante (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book explores how the immediate experience of musical sound relates to processes of meaning construction and discursive mediation. A unique multi-authored work that both draws on and contributes to current debates in ethnomusicology, musicology, psychology, and cognitive science, it presents a novel and productive view of how cultural practice relates to the experience and meaning of musical performance.
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  39.  83
    Phenomenal Experience and the Metaphysics of Persistence.Michael Traynor - 2014 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 114 (3pt3):381-388.
    I will adapt part of an argument in Prosser to the case of persistence, to conclude that our experience does not favour any particular theory of persistence—our immediate experience cannot rightly be considered as evidence in this context. Even if it does in fact seem that objects persist by enduring, this cannot be because they do in fact endure; and if things do in fact persist by perduring, this should not be considered to be in spite of (...)
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  40.  7
    Séance du 6 avril 1935. L'experience generale et l'experience immediate.A. Darbon - 1935 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 9 (1/2):23 - 29.
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  41.  36
    Peirce, Immediate Perception, and the “New” Unconscious: Neuroscience and Empirical Psychology in Support of a “Well-Known Doctrine”.Kory Sorrell - 2015 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 29 (4):457-473.
    ABSTRACT This article defends Charles Peirce's “doctrine of immediate perception.” This realistic view holds that conscious agents, due to the work of unconscious mind, directly perceive the world and often know objects, events, and persons as they truly are, independently of how we might prefer to think of them. The doctrine provides a promising alternative to more recent views insisting that all experience of the world and other persons is ineluctably mediated by language, along with the categories and (...)
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  42.  10
    Immediate Knowledge: The New Dialectic of Givenness.Jay F. Rosenberg - 2002 - In Jay Rosenberg (ed.), Thinking about knowing. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Discusses epistemic foundationalism. Examines the confrontation between Wilfrid Sellars's critique of the ‘Myth of the Given’ and William Alston's defence of ‘immediate knowledge’, and explores and endorses Sellars's strong epistemic internalism and the integrated normative accounts of justification, language‐mastery, concept‐possession, and perceptual experience that support it. The proceduralist thesis that the activity of justifying is prior to the state of being justified is elucidated and defended.
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  43. Immediate transfer of synesthesia to a novel inducer.Aleksandra Mroczko, Thomas Metzinger, Wolf Singer & Danko Nikolić - 2009 - Journal of Vision 9 (12):1-8.
    In synesthesia, a certain stimulus (eg grapheme) is associated automatically and consistently with a stable perceptual-like experience (eg color). These associations are acquired in early childhood and remain robust throughout the lifetime. Synesthetic associations can transfer to novel inducers in adulthood as one learns a second language that uses another writing system. However, it is not known how long this transfer takes. We found that grapheme-color associations can transfer to novel graphemes after only a 10-minute writing exercise. Most subjects (...)
     
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  44.  47
    Reality and Our Experiences.David Crossley - 1999 - Bradley Studies 5 (1):45-61.
    If Bradley is right that Reality is experience, then an analysis of our experience should help us to understand the general nature of Reality. I believe Bradley thought this was the case. Our experience is of two broad types: feelings or immediate experiences on the one hand, and thoughts and volitions on the other. This division marks the boundary between nonintentional and intentional mental states, and whatever passage is allowed between these two types, they are not (...)
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  45.  31
    Corrugator activity confirms immediate negative affect in surprise.Sascha Topolinski & Fritz Strack - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:108172.
    The emotion of surprise entails a complex of immediate responses, such as cognitive interruption, attention allocation to, and more systematic processing of the surprising stimulus. All these processes serve the ultimate function to increase processing depth and thus cognitively master the surprising stimulus. The present account introduces phasic negative affect as the underlying mechanism responsible for this switch in operating mode. Surprising stimuli are schema-discrepant and thus entail cognitive disfluency, which elicits immediate negative affect. This affect in turn (...)
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  46.  19
    Do Immediate External Rewards Really Enhance Intrinsic Motivation?Yuxia Liu, Yang Yang, Xue Bai, Yujie Chen & Lei Mo - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Researchers have conducted many studies on the relationship between external rewards and intrinsic motivation. A recent study showed that, compared with delayed rewards, rewards delivered immediately after the experiment enhanced the participants’ intrinsic motivation. However, this study did not rule out the possibility of a misattribution effect of extrinsic motivation. The present research conducted three studies to explore whether immediate rewards actually enhance intrinsic motivation. To rule out the interference of the misattribution effect of extrinsic motivation, according to the (...)
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  47.  46
    Proximal Experience as an Essential Part of Physics.J. C. W. Edwards - 2021 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 28 (3-4):76-99.
    Conscious experience has been said to be outside of, or alien to, physics, and unexplained in a physical world. However, it is argued here that experience is entirely expected in a physical world that can only be defined by its power to determine patterns of experience. Something physical is something with the type of causal power that can contribute to determining the content of an experience if a subject is present at the right place and time. (...)
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  48. Direct Realism and Immediate Justification.Gianfranco Soldati - 2012 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 112 (1pt1):29-44.
    Direct realism with respect to perceptual experiences has two facets, an epistemological one and a metaphysical one. From the epistemological point of view it involves the claim that perceptual experiences provide immediate justification. From the metaphysical point of view it involves the claim that in perceptual experience we enter into direct contact with items in the external world. In a more radical formulation, often associated with naive realism, the metaphysical conception of direct realism involves the idea that perceptual (...)
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  49.  28
    Retrieving Experience Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics.Laura Hengehold - 2001
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17.1 (2003) 73-75 [Access article in PDF] Retrieving Experience: Subjectivity and Recognition in Feminist Politics. Sonia Kruks. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 2001. Pp. xii + 200. $35.00 h.c. 0-8014-3387-8; $16.95 pbk. 0-8014-8417-0. Sonia Kruks' latest book, Retrieving Experience, is a valuable contribution to ongoing debates about the relevance of feminist philosophy in a period of relative political quietism. It also (...)
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  50.  18
    Photography as violence: On experience and manipulation.Hilde Honerud & Jon Honerud - 2023 - Philosophy of Photography 14 (1):85-94.
    This publication presents a selection of photographic work by Hilde Honerud, made in collaboration with Yoga and Sports with Refugees (YSR) in Lesbos, Greece. It is introduced by a text coauthored with Jon Honerud. In order to engage with the experiences and the vulnerable position of the refugees involved, this project used increasingly apparent formal manipulations to convey an experience beyond the documentary image and to push observers to question the objectivity of images; to move from representation to (...) experience. This entailed a kind of violence to the images that could only be done after spending a long time getting to know the organization and its context. The process raised a number of ethical questions, which we attempt to address in the text accompanying these images. The selection of images published here were part of the exhibition Reality Slipped into a Symbol, at the Vestfold Art Centre, Tonsberg, Norway (9 June–10 July 2022). (shrink)
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