Michael Tye untangles the complex web of empirical and
conceptual issues of the newly revived imagery debate in psychology
between those that liken mental images to pictures and those that
liken them to linguistic descriptions. He also takes into account
longstanding philosophical issues, to arrive at a comprehensive,
up-to-date view and an original theory that provides answers to
questions raised in both psychology and philosophy.Drawing on the
insights of Stephen Kosslyn and the work on vision of David Mart,
Tye develops a new theory of mental imagery that includes an
account of imagistic representation and also tackles questions
about the phenomenal qualities of mental images, image
indeterminacy, the neurophysiolgical basis of imagery, and the
causal relevance of image content to behavior.Tye introduces the
history of philosophical views on the nature of mental imagery from
Aristotle to Kant. He examines the reasons for the decline of
picture theories of imagery and the use of alternative theories,
the reemergence of the picture theory (with special reference to
the work of Stephen Kosslyn), and the contrasting view that mental
images are inner linguistic descriptions rather than pictorial
representations. He then proposes his own theory of images
interpreted as symbol-filled arrays in part like pictures and in
part like linguistic descriptions, addresses the issue of vagueness
in some features of mental images, and argues that images need not
have qualia to account for their phenomenological character. Tye
concludes by discussing the questions of how images are physically
realized in the brain and how the contents of images can be
causally related to behavior.Michael Tye holds appointments in
Philosophy at both Temple University and Kings College, London.
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