Perceptual Spaces Are Sense-Modality- Neutral

The paper presents and discusses phenomenological facts about perceptual spaces and percepts, but ends with a few thoughts about possible causal explanations of such spaces. The overarching double-sided hypothesis claims that - from a phenomenological point of view - each individual animal has at ea...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johansson Ingvar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-03-01
Series:Open Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opphil-2018-0003
Description
Summary:The paper presents and discusses phenomenological facts about perceptual spaces and percepts, but ends with a few thoughts about possible causal explanations of such spaces. The overarching double-sided hypothesis claims that - from a phenomenological point of view - each individual animal has at each consciously perceived moment of time a sense-modality-neutral perceptual space, and that these perceptual spaces are so-called container spaces. This means, to be concrete, that blind persons, deaf persons, and all perceptually non-handicapped persons have the same kind of phenomenological perceptual space, a sense-modality-neutral container space. The causal reflections bring in James J. Gibson’s work on such matters.
ISSN:2543-8875