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    When judging that one's own legs are crossed based solely... — Carmelics
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    Supports→A judgment about one's body posture made on the basis of visual perception alone is not immune to error through misidentification.

    When judging that one's own legs are crossed based solely on seeing legs, one can confuse one's own legs with the legs of a person seated nearby.

    PerceptionPersonal Identity
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    Personal IdentityPerception

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    A judgment about one's body posture made on the basis of visual perception alone...Visual perception does not provide privileged access restricted to one's own bod...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    In a cross-wiring scenario, subject A could feel subject B's legs bein...79%Methodical doubt calls into question the existence of one's body, incl...79%When a judgment such as 'my legs are crossed' is grounded in proprioce...79%A judgment about one's body posture made on the basis of visual percep...72%

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    SEP: bodily-awareness
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    Despite their differences, all bodily experiences seem to display the same epistemological signature: they ground the immunity to error through misidentification relative to the first-person of bodily self-ascriptions. Self-ascription of a property is said to be immune to error if and only if one cannot rationally doubt who instantiates the property when one has gained information about the property in the appropriate way (although one can be mistaken about the property that one ascribes to ones

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