Abstract

In a witty, ingenious and unaccountably undiscussed paper ('Appearing and Appearances', American Philosophical Quarterly, i964), Professor H. H. Price offers a way of introducing a phenomenalistic terminology, which he thinks is useful and indeed necessary for certain purposes, without using arguments based on cases of illusion and other perceptual mistakes. Like the classical empiricists, Price supposes all ideas to be generated ultimately by experience of particular phenomenal aspects of the world:

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