Abstract
Philosophers of perception have a notoriously difficult time trying to account for hallucinatory experiences. One surprisingly quite popular move, and one that cross-cuts the representationalism/relationalism divide, is to say that hallucinations involve an awareness of uninstantiated properties. In this paper, I provide a new argument against this view. Not only are its proponents forced to classify many hallucinations as veridical, such experiences turn out to be necessarily veridical. In addition, I show that representationalists who endorse the uninstantiated property view must reject the common fundamental kind claim and adopt disjunctivism, and naïve realists/relationalists must radically modify their disjunctivism: The distinction between ‘veridical’ and ‘hallucinatory’ will no longer track a metaphysical distinction between the relevant experiences.
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CITATION STYLE
Gow, L. (2024). NECESSARILY VERIDICAL HALLUCINATIONS: A NEW PROBLEM FOR THE UNINSTANTIATED PROPERTY VIEW. Philosophical Quarterly, 74(2), 569–589. https://doi.org/10.1093/pq/pqad075
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