This workshop brings together leading researchers to explore foundational issues in the study of meaning through the locus of three specific types of representation: perceptual representation, pictorial representation, and conscious representation. These forms of representation are compared and contrasted according to their syntax (form), semantics (a function from form to meaning), the types of wordly properties represented (a painting can represent liberty, while vision cannot), and meta-semantics, which studies how representations come to have their meanings. This workshop also seeks to illuminate the question of what distinguishes perceptual, pictorial, or conscious representation from other types of representation.
Convened by
This workshop brings together leading researchers to explore foundational issues in the study of meaning through the locus of three specific types of representation: perceptual representation, pictorial representation, and conscious representation. These forms of representation are compared and contrasted according to their syntax (form), semantics (a function from form to meaning), the types of wordly properties represented (a painting can represent liberty, while vision cannot), and meta-semantics, which studies how representations come to have their meanings. This workshop also seeks to illuminate the question of what distinguishes perceptual, pictorial, or conscious representation from other types of representation.
- Gabriel Rabin, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, NYUAD
- NYU Abu Dhabi Institute