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This volume of collected papers, with the accompanying essays by
the editors, is the definitive source book for the work of this
important experimental psychologist. Originally published in 1991,
it offered previously inaccessible essays by Albert Michotte on
phenomenal causality, phenomenal permanence, phenomenal reality,
and perception and cognition. Within these four sections are the
most significant and representative of the Belgian psychologist's
research in the area of experimental phenomenology. Extremely
insightful introductions by the editors are included that place the
essays in context. Michotte's ideas have played an important role
in much research on the development of perception, and his work on
social perception continues to be influential in social psychology.
The book also includes some lesser-known aspects of his work that
are equally important; for example, a remarkable set of articles on
pictorial analysis.
Colour is largely assumed to be already in the world, a natural
universal that everyone, everywhere understands. Yet cognitive
scientists routinely tell us that colour is an illusion, and a
private one for each of us; neither social nor material, it is held
to be a product of individual brains and eyes rather than an aspect
of things. This collection seeks to challenge these assumptions and
examine their far-reaching consequences, arguing that colour is
about practical involvement in the world, not a finalized set of
theories, and getting to know colour is relative to the situation
one is in – both ecologically and environmentally. Specialists
from the fields of anthropology, psychology, cinematography, art
history and linguistics explore the depths of colour in relation to
light and movement, memory and landscape, language and narrative,
in case studies with an emphasis on Australian First Peoples, but
ranging as far afield as Russia and First Nations in British
Columbia. What becomes apparent, is not only the complex but
important role of colours in socializing the world; but also that
the concept of colour only exists in some times and cultures. It
should not be forgotten that the Munsell Chart, with its
construction of colours as mathematical coordinates of hues, value
and chroma, is not an abstraction of universals, as often claimed,
but is itself a cultural artefact.
It has been claimed that the natural sciences have abstracted for
themselves a 'material world' set apart from human concerns, and
social sciences, in their turn, constructed 'a world of actors
devoid of things'. While a subject such as archaeology, by its very
nature, takes objects into account, other disciplines, such as
psychology, emphasize internal mental structures and other
non-material issues. This book brings together a team of
contributors from across the social sciences who have been taking
'things' more seriously to examine how people relate to objects.
The contributors focus on every day objects and how these objects
enter into our activities over the course of time. Using a
combination of different theoretical approaches, including actor
network theory, ecological psychology, cognitive linguistics and
science and technology studies, the book argues against the
standard notion of objects and their properties as inert and
meaningless and argues for the need to understand the relations
between people and objects in terms of process and change.
This volume of collected papers, with the accompanying essays by
the editors, is the definitive source book for the work of this
important experimental psychologist. Originally published in 1991,
it offered previously inaccessible essays by Albert Michotte on
phenomenal causality, phenomenal permanence, phenomenal reality,
and perception and cognition. Within these four sections are the
most significant and representative of the Belgian psychologist's
research in the area of experimental phenomenology. Extremely
insightful introductions by the editors are included that place the
essays in context. Michotte's ideas have played an important role
in much research on the development of perception, and his work on
social perception continues to be influential in social psychology.
The book also includes some lesser-known aspects of his work that
are equally important; for example, a remarkable set of articles on
pictorial analysis.
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