BEGIN:VCALENDAR PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN VERSION:2.0 CALSCALE:GREGORIAN METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20240328T134850Z DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Sydney:20180703T050000 DTEND;TZID=Australia/Sydney:20180703T130000 SUMMARY:Recent Work on Non-Propositional Intentionality UID:20240328T134850Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6f97df9687-7c6q9 TZID:Australia/Sydney LOCATION:9 Fellows Rd\, Canberra\, Australia\, 2601 DESCRIPTION:
Overview:
\nPropositional attitudes\, such as belief and desire\, have long been taken to play a foundational role in the theories of meaning and mind. But recently\, semantic\, perceptual\, and cognitive considerations have emerged that illustrate the limitations of theories that countenance only propositional attitudes\, and the need for attitudes toward various other kinds of contents\, including both sub-propositional contents and questions. In this conference we will explore ways in which incorporating various \;non-propositional \;attitudes into our theories of meaning and mind can serve to enrich our understanding of the nature of mental and linguistic intentionality. \;
\nSam Cumming: Axial Symmetry as Focal Point in Spatial Interpretation of Film
\nAbstract: The relation between the axis of the camera and the central axis of \;on-screen action is important for maintaining a coherent sense of space across a cut. Our talk provides evidence for an overlooked relationship: the Symmetry rule. Similar to 180 degree rule\, this production regularity creates expectations in the audience\, which in turn support enriched spatial interpretations of edited sequences. Filmmakers often obey symmetry in shot/reverse-shot pairs (if the speaker's eyeline is 30 degrees right of the lens\, the listener's look back along that eyeline will be 30 degrees left of the lens)\, and exit/entrance pairs with movement past the lens: the angle exiting towards the lens matches the angle entering away from the lens. In the paper\, we demonstrate that the expectation of Symmetry leads to precise spatial interpretations. We further argue that the rule is a natural focus for our visual expectations\, since axial symmetry is a species-wide geometrical primitive (Amalric et al. 2017).
\nJessica Keiser: Language Without Information Exchange
\nAbstract: This paper attempts to revive a once-lively program in the philosophy of language&mdash\;that of reducing linguistic phenomena to facts about mental states and actions. I argue that recent skepticism toward this project is generated by features of traditional implementations of the project\, rather than the project itself. A picture of language as essentially a mechanism for cooperative information exchange attracted theorists to metasemantic accounts grounding language use in illocutionary action (roughly\, using an utterance to elicit a propositional attitude). When this picture is rejected\, a metasemantics grounding language in locutionary action (using an utterance to direct attention) emerges as a more viable proposal\, dissolving an intractable issue for traditional theories: the metasemantics of subsentential expressions.
\nJustin D'Ambrosio: Depictive Verbs and the Nature of Perception
\nAbstract: This paper argues that perceptual verbs\, such as 'see'\, 'hear'\, 'smell' and 'taste'\, and depictive verbs\, such as 'draw'\, 'paint'\, 'sketch'\, and 'sculpt'\, share inferential features that distinguish them from both ordinary intensional and ordinary extensional verbs. These inferential
commonalities warrant extending the semantics developed for depictive verbs to perceptual verbs. The semantics I present shows that even though perceptual verbs may be fully extensional\, they share important logical features with the locutions that representationalists use to state their theories of perception. It also sheds light on the puzzle of Macbeth's dagger by helping to explain why so many philosophers of perception have incorrectly taken perceptual verbs to exhibit the features of intensionality.
Gabe Greenberg: The Structure of Visual Content
\nIn this talk I&rsquo\;ll argue for a structured view of \;visual \;content\, understood as the type of \;content \;common to \;visual \;perception\, mental imagery\, \;visual \;memory\, pictures\, and computer imagery. The position that such \;content \;is \;structured \;is analogous to structured views of propositions within the philosophy of language. In this case\, I argue that \;visual \;contents \;take the form of what I call \;perspectival feature maps\, a type of 2-dimensional feature map organized by angular relations to a central viewpoint. \; (There&rsquo\;s a long history of views in this ballpark\, though many focus on the structure of \;visual \;representation\, rather than that of \;visual \;content\; e.g. Treisman 1980\, 1988\; Marr 1982\; Haugeland 1991\; Tye 1991\; Lande 2018.) I motivate the structured account by showing how \;unstructured \;theories of \;visual \;content\, like those which identify perceptual \;content \;with sets of centered-worlds (Chalmers 1996\; Brogaard 2011) or sets of scenarios (Peacocke 1992) are too course-grained\, faltering over cases of impossible images.  \; At the same time\, theories which identify \;visual \;contents \;with concrete scenarios are too fine-grained\, unable to capture spatial indeterminacy. \; Structured \;visual \;content\, I argue\, gets things just right. \; I go on to develop an account of the structure of perspectival feature maps\, with attention to the role of objects and properties within the 2-dimensional array\, and to the mechanism by which viewpoints govern the array&rsquo\;s spatial interpretation. \; These structures\, in turn\, are subject to a precise set of accuracy conditions\, comparable to those of structured propositions. \; The resulting proposal helps to illuminate what is distinctive about \;visual \;representation.
ORGANIZER;CN=Justin D'Ambrosio;CN=Jessica Keiser: METHOD:PUBLISH END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR