Section I: Perception
1: Paul Snowdon: Hinton and the origins of disjunctivism
2: Alex Byrne and Heather Logue: Either / or
3: E. J. Lowe: Against disjunctivism
4: Scott Sturgeon: Disjunctivism about visual experience
5: William Fish: Disjunctivism, indistinguishability, and the
nature of hallucination
6: Bill Brewer: How to account for illusion
7: A. D. Smith: Disjunctivism and discriminability
8: Susanna Siegel: The epistemic conception of hallucination
Section II: Action
9: David-Hillel Ruben: Disjunctive theories of perception and
action
10: Jennifer Hornsby: A disjunctivist conception of acting for
reasons
11: Jonathan Dancy: On how to act - disjunctively
Section III: Knowledge
12: Duncan Pritchard: McDowellian neo-Mooreanism
13: Ram Neta: In defense of disjunctivism
14: Alan Millar: Perceptual-recognitional abilities and perceptual
knowledge
15: Sonia Sedivy: Starting afresh disjunctively: perceptual
engagement with the world
16: John McDowell: The disjunctive conception of experience as
material for a transcendental argument
17: Crispin Wright: Comment on John McDowell's "The Disjunctive
Conception of Experience as Material for a Transcendental Argument"
Adrian Haddock is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of
Stirling.
Fiona Macpherson is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of
Glasgow.
a lucid and judicious assessment... worth having... a
representative snapshot of the current state of play
*Tim Crane, Times Literary Supplement*
Despite the variety of disjunctivism, the present collection hangs
together well. Along with a useful set of abstracts, the editors
provide an excellent introductory map... [a] fascinating book.
*Kieran Setiya, MIND*
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