On Dependency between Wishes and Perception

Introduction. Empirical studies of recent years convincingly show that the character of sensory perception can be influenced by non-cognitive mental states of the agent, such as her desires. The aim of the paper is to analyze how this causal connection between agent's wishes and her sensations...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. I. Ponomarev, K. G. Frolov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Saint Petersburg Electrotechnical University 2021-12-01
Series:Дискурс
Subjects:
Online Access:https://discourse.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/447
_version_ 1797881673762734080
author A. I. Ponomarev
K. G. Frolov
author_facet A. I. Ponomarev
K. G. Frolov
author_sort A. I. Ponomarev
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. Empirical studies of recent years convincingly show that the character of sensory perception can be influenced by non-cognitive mental states of the agent, such as her desires. The aim of the paper is to analyze how this causal connection between agent's wishes and her sensations can affect the epistemological status of dependent sensations.Methodology and sources. The author examines S. Siegel's argument on this issue. S. Siegel argues that the empirically proven dependence of sensations on desires (wishful seeing) should lead to a decrease of the epistemological status of sensations to the same extent as the dependence of beliefs on desires (wishful thinking) leads to a decrease of the epistemological status of these beliefs. Thus Siegel's argument concludes that the phenomenon of wishful seeing deprives us of any reason to accept sensations as credible evidence of the states of the world. So, this is an argument in favor of skepticism.Results and discussion. The article discusses two main strategies for rejecting Siegel's argument. According to the first strategy proposed by R. Long, sensations are not so similar to beliefs that one can conclude that their epistemological status should be decreased on the basis of their dependence on desires. According to another strategy for refuting Siegel's argument, proposed by A. Raftopoulos, the influence of desires on perception does not extend to early vision. Early vision is free from the influence of higher order conscious mental states. The dependence of the results of sensory perception on other mental states is reduced to the influence of these states on the agent's attention. At the same time, attention can be volitionally controlled and can be trained. Therefore dependent perception under certain conditions can be rationally accepted.Conclusion. Thus, the article shows that, even though perception is dependent on other non-cognitive mental states, such as desires, this dependence does not necessarily lead to a decrease in the epistemological status of sensations, so sensations can be rationally accepted under certain conditions. This means that Siegel's argument for skepticism is not compelling.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T03:22:47Z
format Article
id doaj.art-fd9f783d581e4ff8a39f5d0b9919a7ac
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2412-8562
2658-7777
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T03:22:47Z
publishDate 2021-12-01
publisher Saint Petersburg Electrotechnical University
record_format Article
series Дискурс
spelling doaj.art-fd9f783d581e4ff8a39f5d0b9919a7ac2023-03-13T07:29:35ZengSaint Petersburg Electrotechnical UniversityДискурс2412-85622658-77772021-12-0176172710.32603/2412-8562-2021-7-6-17-27430On Dependency between Wishes and PerceptionA. I. Ponomarev0K. G. Frolov1Санкт-Петербургский государственный электротехнический университет «ЛЭТИ» им. В. И. Ульянова (Ленина)Санкт-Петербургский государственный электротехнический университет «ЛЭТИ» им. В. И. Ульянова (Ленина); Высшая школа экономикиIntroduction. Empirical studies of recent years convincingly show that the character of sensory perception can be influenced by non-cognitive mental states of the agent, such as her desires. The aim of the paper is to analyze how this causal connection between agent's wishes and her sensations can affect the epistemological status of dependent sensations.Methodology and sources. The author examines S. Siegel's argument on this issue. S. Siegel argues that the empirically proven dependence of sensations on desires (wishful seeing) should lead to a decrease of the epistemological status of sensations to the same extent as the dependence of beliefs on desires (wishful thinking) leads to a decrease of the epistemological status of these beliefs. Thus Siegel's argument concludes that the phenomenon of wishful seeing deprives us of any reason to accept sensations as credible evidence of the states of the world. So, this is an argument in favor of skepticism.Results and discussion. The article discusses two main strategies for rejecting Siegel's argument. According to the first strategy proposed by R. Long, sensations are not so similar to beliefs that one can conclude that their epistemological status should be decreased on the basis of their dependence on desires. According to another strategy for refuting Siegel's argument, proposed by A. Raftopoulos, the influence of desires on perception does not extend to early vision. Early vision is free from the influence of higher order conscious mental states. The dependence of the results of sensory perception on other mental states is reduced to the influence of these states on the agent's attention. At the same time, attention can be volitionally controlled and can be trained. Therefore dependent perception under certain conditions can be rationally accepted.Conclusion. Thus, the article shows that, even though perception is dependent on other non-cognitive mental states, such as desires, this dependence does not necessarily lead to a decrease in the epistemological status of sensations, so sensations can be rationally accepted under certain conditions. This means that Siegel's argument for skepticism is not compelling.https://discourse.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/447восприятиефилософия восприятиясодержание восприятияскептицизмобоснованиеощущения
spellingShingle A. I. Ponomarev
K. G. Frolov
On Dependency between Wishes and Perception
Дискурс
восприятие
философия восприятия
содержание восприятия
скептицизм
обоснование
ощущения
title On Dependency between Wishes and Perception
title_full On Dependency between Wishes and Perception
title_fullStr On Dependency between Wishes and Perception
title_full_unstemmed On Dependency between Wishes and Perception
title_short On Dependency between Wishes and Perception
title_sort on dependency between wishes and perception
topic восприятие
философия восприятия
содержание восприятия
скептицизм
обоснование
ощущения
url https://discourse.elpub.ru/jour/article/view/447
work_keys_str_mv AT aiponomarev ondependencybetweenwishesandperception
AT kgfrolov ondependencybetweenwishesandperception