
Joshua Gert Presents An Original Account Of Color Properties, And Of Our Perception Of Them. He Employs A General Philosophical Strategy - Neo-pragmatism - Which Challenges An Assumption Made By Virtually All Other Theories Of Color. Neo-pragmatism Rejects The Standard Representationalist Strategy For Solving Placement Problems In Philosophy, Which Relies On The Existence Of A Substantive Notion Of Reference And Truth. Instead, It Makes Use Of Deflationary Accounts Of Such Semantic Notions. Applied To The Domain Of Color, The Result Is A View According To Which Colors Are Primitive Properties Of Objects, Irreducible To Physical Or Dispositional Properties. In This Way They Are More Like Numbers, And Less Like Natural Kinds Such As Water Or Gold. Objective Colors Are Also - Contrary To Current Dogma - Insufficiently Determinate In Their Nature To Allow Them To Be Associated With Precise Points In Standard Color Spaces. A Given Color Can Present Different Veridical Appearances In Different Viewing Circumstances, And To Different Normal Viewers. It Is These Appearances, Which Are To Be Understood In An Adverbial Way, That Can Be Located In Standard Color Spaces. In Explaining The Distinction Between Objective Color And Color Appearance, A Central Analogy To Which Gert Appeals Is That Between The Perceptible Three-dimensional Shape Of An Object, And The Various Ways In Which That Shape Appears From Various Perspectives. Primitive Colors Also Offers An Account Of Color Constancy, A Moderated Version Of Representationalism About Visual Experience, And A Criticism Of The Thesis Of The Transparency Of Experience.
This book investigates the ontological status of color properties and the mechanisms of human color perception through the lens of neo-pragmatism. Joshua Gert, a philosopher specializing in metaphysics and the philosophy of mind, challenges the prevailing representationalist consensus by proposing that colors are primitive, irreducible properties of objects. By employing a deflationary account of reference and truth, the author argues that colors function more like abstract mathematical entities than natural kinds, thereby decoupling objective color from the precise coordinates found in standard color spaces.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Philosophers and scholars of perception frequently note the technical density of the prose and the rigor of Gert's departure from standard representationalist theories. Experts highlight this as a significant contribution to the debate on color realism, particularly for those interested in the intersection of semantics and metaphysics.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191088994
ISBN-13:
9780191088995
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!