Betwixt feeling and thinking: two-level accounts of experience

What sense can we make of Hume’s notorious distinction between impressions and ideas? We look at two sense-datum theories of experience that offer competing accounts of the contrast between sensation and imagination. John Foster’s two-level account of experience presented in <i>The Case for Id...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martin, MGF
Other Authors: Knowles, J
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2019
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Summary:What sense can we make of Hume’s notorious distinction between impressions and ideas? We look at two sense-datum theories of experience that offer competing accounts of the contrast between sensation and imagination. John Foster’s two-level account of experience presented in <i>The Case for Idealism</i> and <i>The Nature of Perception</i> is contrasted with Bertrand Russell’s discussion of sensation, imagination, and memory in <i>The Theory of Knowledge</i>. The key elements of both approaches are sketched. Foster’s appeal simply to a ‘subjectively manifest’ difference is rejected as inadequate. A problem with Russell’s conception of experience of past is canvassed, and then further elaborated in relation to previous awareness condition on personal memories. The contrasting views of memory are extended to the case of imagination. The chapter concludes with more general morals to be drawn about the relation between the first-person perspective on experience and the underlying psychological properties which explain experience’s being so.