An Essay on Reason and Perception

This treatise on epistemology is a defense of knowledge of the physical world, which refutes a collection of the history of philosophy's most popular arguments, such as the argument that sensory perception is capable of deception, the argument that sensory experience is subjective and therefore incapable of knowing objective reality, the argument that perception experiences only a series of sensations and therefore can never infer direct knowledge of cause and effect, and the argument that reason assumes its own validity and therefore rests upon a circular argument. Along this illuminating intellectual adventure, this essay discusses language, logic, how the human brain works, what it means for something to be objective or subjective, and how reason and perception function.
Required reading for fans of philosophy, or for anyone who has ever had doubts or deep thoughts about how it is possible for us to know what we know and is looking for a well-reasoned, thoughtful, logical defense of knowledge.

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An Essay on Reason and Perception

This treatise on epistemology is a defense of knowledge of the physical world, which refutes a collection of the history of philosophy's most popular arguments, such as the argument that sensory perception is capable of deception, the argument that sensory experience is subjective and therefore incapable of knowing objective reality, the argument that perception experiences only a series of sensations and therefore can never infer direct knowledge of cause and effect, and the argument that reason assumes its own validity and therefore rests upon a circular argument. Along this illuminating intellectual adventure, this essay discusses language, logic, how the human brain works, what it means for something to be objective or subjective, and how reason and perception function.
Required reading for fans of philosophy, or for anyone who has ever had doubts or deep thoughts about how it is possible for us to know what we know and is looking for a well-reasoned, thoughtful, logical defense of knowledge.

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An Essay on Reason and Perception

An Essay on Reason and Perception

by Russell Hasan
An Essay on Reason and Perception

An Essay on Reason and Perception

by Russell Hasan

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Overview

This treatise on epistemology is a defense of knowledge of the physical world, which refutes a collection of the history of philosophy's most popular arguments, such as the argument that sensory perception is capable of deception, the argument that sensory experience is subjective and therefore incapable of knowing objective reality, the argument that perception experiences only a series of sensations and therefore can never infer direct knowledge of cause and effect, and the argument that reason assumes its own validity and therefore rests upon a circular argument. Along this illuminating intellectual adventure, this essay discusses language, logic, how the human brain works, what it means for something to be objective or subjective, and how reason and perception function.
Required reading for fans of philosophy, or for anyone who has ever had doubts or deep thoughts about how it is possible for us to know what we know and is looking for a well-reasoned, thoughtful, logical defense of knowledge.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940181660120
Publisher: Russell Hasan
Publication date: 05/03/2025
Sold by: Draft2Digital
Format: eBook
File size: 386 KB

About the Author

Russell Hasan was born the son of a white Jewish mother and a dark-skinned Muslim father—and that isn't the strangest thing about him. His father had ties to the mafia—nope, not the weirdest thing about him. He thought he was a gay man for many years before realizing he is agender asexual—relatively normal compared to what truly makes him strange. Do you want to know what the weirdest, strangest thing about Russell is?

He's a WRITER.

Yes, that's right. He writes. Why? How? Why would he want to do that to himself? How could he allow this to happen to himself? He is still trying to figure that one out. Therapy can cure lots of things and alcohol and drugs can cure other things, but the only cure for being a writer is to write, so he writes. He's not into BDSM, yet for some reason he has chosen to punish himself by having a passion for writing and a need to write. Despite having made the huge mistake of choosing to be a writer, his books have sold over 10,000 copies, so perhaps it was not the worst mistake he ever made after all. He does not have one particular bestseller but has instead spread those 10,000 sales across many books he wrote. His magical journey of self-torture begins when he has the idea for a new book, and then continues when he wakes up at 6am to write from 6am to 8am before work every day (he has a day job—he's not insane! His day job is being a lawyer, the most boring, evil job in the world, by the way), and, after many cups of Starbucks matcha tea and Coca Cola (never Pepsi—yuck!) he somehow puts words onto a page. He has written 30 books, both nonfiction and fiction, but, as something of a twist on the traditional successful indie author model, he is known more for his indie nonfiction, not his fiction. But he does write fiction. Some of his fiction is good too, probably, he hopes.

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