Sentence examples for any phenomenal difference from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

Obviously there can be differences in the representational contents of experiences without any phenomenal difference.

To explain the subject's ignorance we need only say that any phenomenal difference that the unattended gorilla makes is a difference that the subject is unable to use in answering the experimenter's question about whether anything strange happened in the scene.

Similar(58)

Assuming that the property of being a square is the same as the property of being a regular diamond (an assumption defended by Peacocke in 1993, contested by Tye 2003, but granted by Tye 2004), this appears to be a case in which there is a phenomenal difference without any difference in the properties represented.

The way you cut your raw veg (and fruit) can make a phenomenal difference to how they taste.

Part of Mr. Montana's greatness, Mr. Walsh wrote in an article in the Harvard Business Review a year ago, is the "10percentto15percentcent of the time his spontaneous instincts would break loose and make a phenomenal difference in the outcome of a game". Mr. Walsh said Mr. Montana had to be encouraged to try spontaneity early in his career.

However, there is still a phenomenal difference between these two ways of representing the square.

Going with these differences, there seems to be a phenomenal difference between the experience of seeing a red cube to your left and seeing a red cube to your right.

The subject's ignorance of the gorilla's appearance, for example, is compatible with its being the case that the presence of the gorilla does make a phenomenal difference for the inattentive subject.

It may be that it is a phenomenal difference that is epistemically unusable because it is immediately forgotten (see Wolfe, 1998) or it may, alternatively, be a difference that is unusable because it is too unstructrued and inchoate to be epistemically mobilizable.

The normal representationalist move would be to say that the visual experience represents the relevant part of the world as being blurry, but here we want to concede that there is a phenomenal difference between seeing an object as being blurry and blurrily seeing a nonblurry object.

Such a phenomenal difference in the internalization of Aβ40 between neurons and BBB endothelial cells may provide essential clues to understanding how various cells can differentially regulate Aβ proteins and help explain the vulnerability of cortical and hippocampal neurons to Aβ toxicity.

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