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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1987

Pages: 215-232

Series: Profiles

ISBN (Hardback): 9789027724021

Full citation:

Romane Clark, "What is a "perceptually well-defined individual"? Hintikka's views on perception", in: Jaakko Hintikka, Berlin, Springer, 1987

What is a "perceptually well-defined individual"? Hintikka's views on perception

Romane Clark

pp. 215-232

in: Jaakko Hintikka, Berlin, Springer, 1987

Abstract

Hintikka's Presentation to the 1967 Oberlin Colloquium, "On the Logic of Perception",1 seemed an exciting and important paper. Time has supported that impression. The paper itself has affected the form of a number of more recent essays on perception. More than most, this paper has effected a change in the way a major area of philosophy has come to be discussed. Looking back, the thing that now stands out is how very different Hintikka's discussion of perception was from what standarly appeared then. Hintikka had remarkably little to say about things like "visual constancy", or Gestalt phenomena, or illusion and hallucination, or of the relation of sense experience to perception, or of how much is directly seen and how much is inferred in perception. Yet these sorts of topics seemed essential to getting at the nature and content of perception. Discussion of topics like these tended to dominate the academic, philosophical literature on perception.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1987

Pages: 215-232

Series: Profiles

ISBN (Hardback): 9789027724021

Full citation:

Romane Clark, "What is a "perceptually well-defined individual"? Hintikka's views on perception", in: Jaakko Hintikka, Berlin, Springer, 1987