The central claim of this paper is that what it is like to see green or any other perceptible property is just the
perceptual mode of presentation of that property. Perceptual modes of presentation are important because they help resolve a tension in current work on consciousness.
Philosophers are pulled by three mutually inconsistent theses: representational externalism, representationalism, and phenomenal
internalism. I throw my hat in with defenders of the first two: the externalist representationalists. We are faced with the
problem of explaining away intuitions that favor phenomenal internalism. Perceptual modes of presentation account for what
it is like to see properties in a way that accommodates those intuitions without vindicating phenomenal internalism itself.
Perceptual MoPs therefore provide a new way of being an externalist representationalist.