Disjunctivism unmotivated

Gordon Knight

pp. 355-372

Many naive realists are inclined to accept a negative disjunctivist strategy in order to deal with the challenge presented by the possibility of phenomenologically indistinguishable hallucination. In the first part of this paper I argue that this approach is methodologically inconsistent because it undercuts the phenomenological motivation that underlies the appeal of naive realism. In the second part of the paper I develop an alternative to the negative disjunctivist account along broadly Meinongian lines. In the last section of this paper I consider and evaluate a somewhat similar but rival view of hallucination developed by Mark Johnston.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11097-013-9304-4

Full citation:

Knight, G. (2014). Disjunctivism unmotivated. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 13 (2), pp. 355-372.

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