Barry Dainton |
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Feedback: bdainton@liv.ac.uk |
CONTENTS i1 Introduction ...................................................1 1.1 The Phenomenal 1.2 The Phenomenal and the Physical 1.3 Understanding 1.4 Perception and Projection 1.5 Phenomenology 1.6 Reality, appearance and phenomenal truths 1.7 Questions of demarcation and individuation 1.8 A look Ahead 2. Unity, Introspection and awareness.................28 2.2 Awareness 2.3 The Phenomenal background 2.4 Pure awareness 2.5 The A-thesis and common sense 2.6 Variations on a theme 2.7 Simplicity 3 Phenomenal Space..........................................60 3.1 Consciousness, co-consciousness and space 3.2 Non-spatial consciousness 3.3 Dis-integration 3.4 Phenomenal spaces 3.5 The S-thesis reconsidered 3.6 V-spaces: further issues 3.7 Co-consciousness 4. Transitivity....................................................88 4.1 Co-consciousness as a relation 4.2 Streams and their parts 4.3 Unity and transitivity 4.4 Transitivity: the case against 4.5 Transitivity: the case for 4.6 A question of interpretation 5 Phenomenal time: problems and principles.......113 5.1 Time in experience 5.2 Continuity in question 5.3 Experience, the present and presence 5.4 Memory and the experience of time 5.5 Pulses and binding 5.6 A conflict of principles 6 Broad and Husserl..........................................136 6.1 A curious tale 6.2 Broad: the early account 6.3 Broad: the later account 6.4 Connectedness and presentedness 6.5 Husserl on the 'consciousness of internal time' 6.6 New words, old problems 6.7 Husserl's change of view 7 The overlap model..........................................162 7.1 Foster on the time within experience 7.2 Innocent curiosities 7.3 Durations and thresholds 7.4 Symmetry, flow and mode 7.5 Passage within a four-dimensional world 7.6 Time, awareness and simultaneity 8 Phenomenal interdependence...........................183 8.1 Bundles and bonds 8.2 Wholes and parts 8.3 Mereological essentialism 8.4 Phenomenal interdependence 8.5 Interdependence and its limits: sensory wholes 8.6 Strong Impingement 8.7 Interdependence and its limits: meaning 9 The ramifications of co-consciousness.............214 9.1 Co-conscious wholes 9.2 Global character: type holism and token holism 9.3 Space and character 9.4 C-holism and succession 9.5 C-holism and temporal modes of presentation 9.6 Transitivity revisited 9.7 Conclusion |
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