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This volume is about the many ways we perceive. In nineteen new
essays, philosophers and cognitive scientists explore the nature of
the individual senses, how and what they tell us about the world,
and how they interrelate. They consider how the senses extract
perceptual content from receptoral information and what kinds of
objects we perceive and whether multiple senses ever perceive a
single event. Questions pertaining to how many senses we have, what
makes one sense distinct from another, and whether and why
distinguishing senses may be useful feature prominently.
Contributors examine the extent to which the senses act in concert,
rather than as discrete modalities, and whether this influence is
epistemically pernicious, neutral, or beneficial. Many of the
essays engage with the idea that it is unduly restrictive to think
of perception as a collation of contents provided by individual
sense modalities. Rather, contributors contend that to understand
perception properly we need to build into our accounts the idea
that the senses work together. In doing so, they aim to develop
better paradigms for understanding the senses and thereby to move
toward a better understanding of perception.
Human beings are in contact with the world through their minds. One
can make sensory perceptual contact with the world: One sees the
tree and hears its leaves flutter. And one makes cognitive contact
with the world: One forms beliefs about the tree, memories of how
it was in the past, and expectations of how it will be in the
future. Can the first, perception, be influenced in important ways
by the second, cognition? Do cognitive states such as memories,
beliefs, and expectations affect what one perceives through the
senses? And what is the importance of these possible relations to
how we theorize and understand the human mind? Possible cognitive
influence on perception (sometimes called "cognitive penetration of
perception") has been long debated in philosophy of mind and
cognitive science: Some argue that such influence occurs, while
others argue that it does not or cannot. In this excellent
introduction and overview of the problem, Dustin Stokes examines
the following: The philosophical and scientific background to
cognition and perception Contemporary ways of distinguishing
cognition and perception Questions about the representational
content of perception versus cognition Distinct theories of mental
architecture: modularity versus malleability Consequences for
epistemology, philosophy of science, and aesthetics Philosophical
and scientific research on perceptual attention Perceptual skill,
learning, and expertise Perceptual content, objectivity, and
cultural bias. Additional features, such as chapter summaries,
suggestions for further reading, and a glossary, make Thinking and
Perceiving an ideal resource for students of philosophy of mind and
psychology, cognitive psychology, and cognitive science.
Human beings are in contact with the world through their minds. One
can make sensory perceptual contact with the world: One sees the
tree and hears its leaves flutter. And one makes cognitive contact
with the world: One forms beliefs about the tree, memories of how
it was in the past, and expectations of how it will be in the
future. Can the first, perception, be influenced in important ways
by the second, cognition? Do cognitive states such as memories,
beliefs, and expectations affect what one perceives through the
senses? And what is the importance of these possible relations to
how we theorize and understand the human mind? Possible cognitive
influence on perception (sometimes called "cognitive penetration of
perception") has been long debated in philosophy of mind and
cognitive science: Some argue that such influence occurs, while
others argue that it does not or cannot. In this excellent
introduction and overview of the problem, Dustin Stokes examines
the following: The philosophical and scientific background to
cognition and perception Contemporary ways of distinguishing
cognition and perception Questions about the representational
content of perception versus cognition Distinct theories of mental
architecture: modularity versus malleability Consequences for
epistemology, philosophy of science, and aesthetics Philosophical
and scientific research on perceptual attention Perceptual skill,
learning, and expertise Perceptual content, objectivity, and
cultural bias. Additional features, such as chapter summaries,
suggestions for further reading, and a glossary, make Thinking and
Perceiving an ideal resource for students of philosophy of mind and
psychology, cognitive psychology, and cognitive science.
This volume is about the many ways we perceive. In nineteen new
essays, philosophers and cognitive scientists explore the nature of
the individual senses, how and what they tell us about the world,
and how they interrelate. They consider how the senses extract
perceptual content from receptoral information and what kinds of
objects we perceive and whether multiple senses ever perceive a
single event. Questions pertaining to how many senses we have, what
makes one sense distinct from another, and whether and why
distinguishing senses may be useful feature prominently.
Contributors examine the extent to which the senses act in concert,
rather than as discrete modalities, and whether this influence is
epistemically pernicious, neutral, or beneficial. Many of the
essays engage with the idea that it is unduly restrictive to think
of perception as a collation of contents provided by individual
sense modalities. Rather, contributors contend that to understand
perception properly we need to build into our accounts the idea
that the senses work together. In doing so, they aim to develop
better paradigms for understanding the senses and thereby to move
toward a better understanding of perception.
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