Non-Conceptualism and the Challenges of the Conceptualist on the Cognitive Process of Perception
by Emmanuel Ola Akintona
The idea that our perceptual experience is more detailed than what concepts we possess informs the idea of non-conceptualism in perception. Gareth Evans was the first to make this point in The Varieties of Reference. Christopher Peacocke's famous autonomy thesis, otherwise known as autonomy principle, further buttresses Evans' argument. It states that it is possible for a creature to be in states with non-conceptual content even though that creature possesses no conceptual ability at all. The idea of non-conceptual content of perceptual experience had since then been generating serious polemics among philosophers of perception. The non-conceptualist claims that creatures without conceptual ability can be in a content-bearing state (non-conceptual state) since they do not possess concept, memory or linguistic ability. Concepts are considered to be constituents of those intentional contents that can be the complete truth-evaluable contents of judgment and belief.
Read the rest of the article. (Acrobat Reader or similar software is required)