This thesis defends naïve realist perceptualism about absence experiences: the claim that sometimes absences are among the things that we genuinely perceive and thereby are consciously acquainted with. I argue for a view on which absences can be among the objects of our perceptual experiences, where perceptual experiences are understood as presentational relations of conscious acquaintance between perceivers and the perceived things. Such a view provides a compelling account of what it is like t…
Read moreThis thesis defends naïve realist perceptualism about absence experiences: the claim that sometimes absences are among the things that we genuinely perceive and thereby are consciously acquainted with. I argue for a view on which absences can be among the objects of our perceptual experiences, where perceptual experiences are understood as presentational relations of conscious acquaintance between perceivers and the perceived things. Such a view provides a compelling account of what it is like to see or feel holes, see shadows or darkness, hear silence, see or feel something disappear, or see the absence of a friend in a café.
In the first part, I investigate the metaphysical and ontological commitments of a naïve realist account of perception. In the second part, I look at different kinds of absence experiences and argue that a perceptualist account gives the best explanation of their conscious characters. Over the course of six chapters, each focusing on a specific kind of an absence experience, I develop a novel unified account of absence experiences and their objects on which absences are temporally extended instances of properties of spatial and temporal locations.