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Немецкий журнал в Скопус, первый квартиль (философия), Nous-Supplement: Philosophical Issues

Уважаемые коллеги, доброго времени суток! Представляем вам немецкое научное издание Nous-Supplement: Philosophical Issues. Журнал имеет первый квартиль, издается в Wiley-VCH Verlag, выходит один раз в год, его SJR за 2019 г. равен 1,911, печатный ISSN - 1533-6077, электронный - 1758-2237, предметная область Философия. Вот так выглядит обложка:

Редактором является Эрнест Соса, контактные данные - cs-journals@wiley.com, cs-germany@wiley.com, chris.jones@sheridan.com, KMcCarthy@Wiley.com

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Данное ежегодное журнальное приложение к изданию Noûs посвящено работам в определенных обозначенных редакцией областях философии и содержит передовые идеи некоторых из наиболее важных авторов в этих областях.

Пример статьи, название - Naive realism, representationalism, and the rationalizing role of visual perception. Заголовок (INTRODUCTION) - Suppose that I'm charged with helping a child learn his colours. The child has a number of uniformly coloured cubes, and we play the ‘which colour?’ game. This involves him presenting me with a cube and me saying which colour it is, and then me presenting him with a cube and him saying which colour it is, and so on. He holds up a green cube, and says ‘which colour?’ I say: ‘it's green’. I judge correctly. But is my judgement rational?

It depends on the scenario. Compare two. In the first, Inattentive, the game has been going on for what seems like hours, and I am losing the will to live. I go through the motions and just guess that the cube is green, without even looking. Though my judgement is correct, it is not rational. In the second scenario, Perception, I am playing the game properly and attentively. Based on what I can see, I judge that the cube is green. In Perception, my judgement is rational in the light of my visual perception.

This illustrates the phenomenon I want to focus on: the rationalizing role of visual perception. My interest is in whether reflecting upon this enables us to settle a dispute in the metaphysics of perceptual experience: that between representationalism and naive realism.

In §2 I clarify what it means to say that perceptions are rationalizing. In §3 I set out Ginsborg's (2011) argument which aims to show that reflecting upon the rationalizing role of perception supports representationalism.2 In §4 I show how this argument can be extended so as to challenge naive realism. In §5 I explain why these arguments fail. I do not claim that reflecting upon the rationalizing role of visual perception supports naive realism over representationalism. Rather, I doubt that we can settle the dispute by reflecting on the rationalizing role of perception.