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    Cases of illusion and delusion are of the same basic type — Carmelics
    Home/Perception
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    Supports→A rat-delusion (hallucination of pink rats) involves a distinctive sensory experience that dictates an erroneous perceptual judgment by accurately representing features present in that experience

    Cases of illusion and delusion are of the same basic type

    Perception
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    A rat-delusion (hallucination of pink rats) involves a distinctive sensory exper...In illusion cases, the sensory experience dictates an erroneous judgment by accu...Therefore the same structure applies to delusion cases such as an alcoholic judg...

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    Cases of illusion and cases of delusion/hallucination are of the same ...91%Once illusion is explained via sense-data, the illusion case cannot be...84%The Müller-Lyer illusion shows that a belief can seem true while relia...78%It is possible to have a persisting seeming (e.g., that one line is lo...77%

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    The distinction between sensory perception and judgmental acumen enables Austin to distinguish between central cases of illusion and central cases of delusion, and also to sketch explanations of what is going on in those cases that do not make appeal to sense-data. Austin takes the defender of (i) and (ii) to argue as follows. First, consider an illusion, for example a stick that looks bent but really isn’t. Such an illusion has two key features. First, it clearly involves a distinctive sensory

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