
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2009
Pages: 551-572
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "How representationalism can account for the phenomenal significance of Illumination", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 8 (4), 2009, pp. 551-572.


How representationalism can account for the phenomenal significance of Illumination
pp. 551-572
in: Ezequiel Di Paolo (ed), The social and enactive mind, Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 8 (4), 2009.Abstract
In this paper, I defend a representationalist account of the phenomenal character of color experiences. Representationalism, the thesis that phenomenal character supervenes on a certain kind of representational content, so-called phenomenal content, has been developed primarily in two different ways, as Russellian and Fregean representationalism. While the proponents of Russellian and Fregean representationalism differ with respect to what they take the contents of color experiences to be, they typically agree that colors are exhaustively characterized by the three dimensions of the color solid: hue, saturation, and lightness. I argue that a viable version of representationalism needs to renounce this restriction to three dimensions and consider illumination to be a genuine phenomenal dimension of color. My argument for this thesis falls into two parts. I first consider the phenomenon of color constancy in order to show that neither Russellian nor Fregean representationalism can do justice to the phenomenal significance of local illumination. I subsequently formulate a version of representationalism that accounts for illumination by taking it as a phenomenal dimension of color.
Publication details
Publisher: Springer
Place: Berlin
Year: 2009
Pages: 551-572
Series: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences
Full citation:
, "How representationalism can account for the phenomenal significance of Illumination", Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences 8 (4), 2009, pp. 551-572.