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C. D. Broad Some elementary reflexions on sense-perception article Sense-perception is a hackneyed topic, and I must therefore begin by craving your indulgence. I was moved to make it the subject of this evening’s lecture by the fact that I have lately been reading the book in which the most important of the late Professor Prichard’s scattered writings on Sense-perception have been collected by Sir W. D. Ross. Like everything that Prichard wrote, these essays are extremely acute, transparently honest, and admirably thorough. I shall not attempt here either to expound or to criticize Prichard, but he may be taken to be hovering, perhaps somewhat disapprovingly, in the background during the lecture.

Some elementary reflexions on sense-perception

C. D. Broad

Philosophy, vol. 27, no. 100, 1952, pp. 3–17

Abstract

Sense-perception is a hackneyed topic, and I must therefore begin by craving your indulgence. I was moved to make it the subject of this evening’s lecture by the fact that I have lately been reading the book in which the most important of the late Professor Prichard’s scattered writings on Sense-perception have been collected by Sir W. D. Ross. Like everything that Prichard wrote, these essays are extremely acute, transparently honest, and admirably thorough. I shall not attempt here either to expound or to criticize Prichard, but he may be taken to be hovering, perhaps somewhat disapprovingly, in the background during the lecture.

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