1. Introduction
Part I: Philosophical Theories of Visual Perception
2. Sense Datum Theories
3. The Representational Principle and Intentional Theories
4. Adverbialism and Qualia Theories
5. Naïve Realism
Part II: The Philosophy of Perception and the Sciences of the Mind
6. The Philosophy of Perception and Vision Science
7. Color, Color Vision, and Color Science
8. Perception and the Nonvisual Sense Modalities
9. Multimodality
Biography
William Fish is Professor of Philosophy at Massey University, New Zealand. He is the author of Perception, Hallucination, and Illusion (2009) and the editor of Perception: Critical Concepts in Philosophy (Routledge, 2016).
"I have been using the first edition of William Fish’s Philosophy of Perception very successfully in my philosophy of perception courses. The second edition has all the virtues of the first: presenting a balanced account of the principal theories in the field, uncovering potentially problematic assumptions, and raising issues for further discussion – all written in an admirably clear and engaging style. The new edition contains discussions of recent work at the intersection of the philosophy and the science of perception, including chapters on color and color vision, interaction between sense modalities, and cross-modal illusions. Highly recommended."
Frances Egan, Rutgers University






