Knowledge and Reality
Selected Essays
McGinn, Colin Professor of Philosophy, Rutgers University, New Jersey
Print publication date: 2002 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-925158-2







doi:10.1093/0199251584.003.0016

Colin McGinn
Abstract: In this essay—the first of two essays on colour included in this collection—McGinn abandons the dispositional theory that he first defended in The Subjective View (1983). In its standard formulation, the dispositional theory of colour claims that an object's being red consists in its possession of some physical property which, in turn, has the causal role of generating experiences of red in perceivers; this property is what disposes the object to cause red experiences. Following a demonstration of how this dispositional analysis fails to account for the phenomenology of colour perception, McGinn defends a revised position that combines ‘a form of naïve realism about colour perception’ with a ‘natural descendent’ of the dispositional theory, according to which primitive colour properties are not identical to, but rather supervene on, complex dispositional properties.

Keywords: colour, disposition, dispositional theory, properties, supervenience,

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Part I Knowledge and Necessity
Part II Thought and World
Part III Reality and Appearance