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Single Idea 8779

[from 'Mental Acts: their content and their objects' by Peter Geach, in 18. Thought / E. Abstraction / 8. Abstractionism Critique ]

Full Idea

It is impossible to form the concept of 'chromatic colour' by discriminative attention to a feature given in my visual experience. In seeing a red window-pane, I do not have two sensations, one of redness and one of chromatic colour.

Clarification

'Chromatic colours' are all those apart from greyscales

Gist of Idea

We can form two different abstract concepts that apply to a single unified experience

Source

Peter Geach (Mental Acts: their content and their objects [1957], §10)

Book Reference

Geach,Peter: 'Mental Acts: Their content and their objects' [RKP 1971], p.37


A Reaction

Again Geach begs the question, because abstractionists claim that you can focus on two different 'aspects' of the one experience, as that it is a 'window', or it is 'red', or it is not a wall, or it is not monochrome.