Motivating and defending the phenomenological conception of perceptual justification

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Abstract

Perceptual experiences justify. When I look at the black laptop in front of me and my perceptual experience presents me with a black laptop placed on my desk, my perceptual experience has justificatory force with respect to the proposition that there is black laptop on the desk. The present paper addresses the question of why perceptual experiences are a source of immediate justification: What gives them their justificatory force? I shall argue that the most plausible and the most straightforward answer to this question consists in what I call the phenomenological conception of perceptual justification. Perceptual experiences justify by virtue of their distinctive presentive phenomenology. This is a truly internalist conception that enjoys significant advantages over rival conceptions. In the course of his paper, I demonstrate the advantages of the phenomenological conception and defend it against a recent objection.

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APA

Berghofer, P. (2023). Motivating and defending the phenomenological conception of perceptual justification. Inquiry (United Kingdom), 66(6), 947–964. https://doi.org/10.1080/0020174X.2020.1712232

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