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Qualia, Space, and Control 

Author: Pete Mandik
DOI: 10.1080/095150899105927
Publication Frequency: 6 issues per year
Published in: journal Philosophical Psychology, Volume 12, Issue 1 March 1999 , pages 47 - 60
Number of References: 15
Formats available: PDF (English)
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Abstract

According to representionalists, qualia-the introspectible properties of sensory experience-are exhausted by the representational contents of experience. Representationalists typically advocate an informational psychosemantics whereby a brain state represents one of its causal antecedents in evolutionarily determined optimal circumstances. I argue that such a psychosemantics may not apply to certain aspects of our experience, namely, our experience of space in vision, hearing, and touch. I offer that these cases can be handled by supplementing informational psychosemantics with a procedural psychosemantics whereby a representation is about its effects instead of its causes. I discuss conceptual and empirical points that favor a procedural representationalism for our experience of space.
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