Nigel J.T. Thomas’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


The Multidimensional Spectrum of Imagination: Images, Dreams, Hallucinations, and Active, Imaginative Perception
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April 2014

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48 Citations

Nigel J.T. Thomas

A theory of the structure and cognitive function of the human imagination that attempts to do justice to traditional intuitions about its psychological centrality is developed, largely through a detailed critique of the theory propounded by Colin McGinn. Like McGinn, I eschew the highly deflationary views of imagination, common amongst analytical philosophers, that treat it either as a conceptually incoherent notion, or as psychologically trivial. However, McGinn fails to develop his alternative account satisfactorily because (following Reid, Wittgenstein and Sartre) he draws an excessively sharp, qualitative distinction between imagination and perception, and because of his flawed, empirically ungrounded conception of hallucination. His arguments in defense of these views are rebutted in detail, and the traditional, passive, Cartesian view of visual perception, upon which several of them implicitly rely, is criticized in the light of findings from recent cognitive science and neuroscience. It is also argued that the apparent intuitiveness of the passive view of visual perception is a result of mere historical contingency. An understanding of perception (informed by modern visual science) as an inherently active process enables us to unify our accounts of perception, mental imagery, dreaming, hallucination, creativity, and other aspects of imagination within a single coherent theoretical framework.

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Citations (1)


... Numerous hypotheses and theories underscore different characteristics and functions of imagination (for review, see Brann, 2017;Kearney, 1988;Stevenson, 2003). Some scholars posit that imagination mediates the relationship between perceptions and mental representations, contributing to the construction of the "human imagination spectrum" (McGinn, 2004) and the "multidimensional continuum view" (Nigel, 2014). These frameworks suggest that imagination plays a crucial role in forming a stable representation of the world for each perceiving individual. ...

Reference:

Editorial: Imagination, cognition, and the arts
The Multidimensional Spectrum of Imagination: Images, Dreams, Hallucinations, and Active, Imaginative Perception