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    One can have this non-conceptual awareness without having... — Carmelics
    Home/Perception
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    Supports→Non-conceptual awareness of sensations cannot account for the justification of appearance beliefs

    One can have this non-conceptual awareness without having any idea what kind of experiences one is having

    Perception
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    Perception

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    Non-conceptual awareness of sensations cannot account for the justification of a...

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    Justifying an appearance belief requires more than mere non-conceptual awarenessNon-conceptual awareness of sensations cannot account for the justification of a...

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    There is a kind of awareness of sensations that does not involve learning or the...

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    There is a kind of awareness of sensations that does not involve learn...79%Bodily experiences should not be understood in perceptual terms.78%Judgement cannot consist in awareness of ideas not present to our mind...77%Non-conceptual awareness of sensations does not account for the justif...77%

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    Perhaps the most important problem for this view concerns the relevant understanding of seemings, or perceptual experience. It is clear that seemings must be non-belief states of some sort, as their epistemological role is to confer justification on basic beliefs, and the latter wouldn’t be basic if seemings were themselves beliefs. The “Sellarsian dilemma” is a famous argument, due perhaps as much to BonJour (1978, 1985) as to Sellars (1956), which claims that “experience” and “seemings” and th

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