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Overly Enactive Imagination? Radically Re‐Imagining Imagining
Author(s) -
Hutto Daniel D.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
the southern journal of philosophy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.281
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 2041-6962
pISSN - 0038-4283
DOI - 10.1111/sjp.12122
Subject(s) - frame (networking) , epistemology , content (measure theory) , correctness , focus (optics) , aesthetics , sociology , psychology , cognitive science , philosophy , computer science , mathematics , mathematical analysis , telecommunications , physics , optics , programming language
A certain philosophical frame of mind holds that contentless imaginings are unimaginable, “inconceivable” (Shapiro [Shapiro, L., 2014a], p. 214) ‐ that it is simply not possible to imagine acts of imagining in the absence of representational content. Against this, this paper argues that there is no naturalistically respectable way to rule out the possibility of contentless imaginings on purely analytic or conceptual grounds. Moreover, agreeing with Langland‐Hassan (2015), it defends the view that the best way to understand the content and correctness conditions of non‐basic, hybrid imaginative attitudes is to assume that basic sensory imaginings are enlisted to play many different kinds of cognitive roles depending on the surrounding contentful attitudes that imaginers adopt toward them. Finally, it argues that when it comes to understanding how pure, basic sensory imaginings do their explanatorily important work there is every reason to focus on the properties of such imaginings that enable appropriate interactions and exactly no reason for thinking that representational contents are amongst those properties.