Warren (2005)
Warren, William. (2005) Direct Perception: The View From Here. Philosophical Topics 33 (1), 335-361.
Title | Direct Perception: The View From Here |
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Resource Type | journal article |
Author(s) | William Warren |
Year | 2005 |
Journal | Philosophical Topics |
Volume | 33 |
Number | 1 |
Pages | 335-361 |
Abstract
The view that perception is direct holds that a perceiver is aware of or in contact with ordinary mind-independent objects, rather than mind-dependent surrogates thereof. In this paper I try to articulate an account of direct perception from a Gibsonian point of view, located within the wider terrain of cognitive science and psychology. James Gibson's ecological theory proposes that perception is a relation in which an active agent is in contact with behaviorally relevant features and properties of its environment; this relation is causally supported by perceptual systems that are attuned to information which specifies those features and properties. I will argue that the theory offers the means to resist the main lines of attack on direct perception, including the Arguments from Illusion,-Hallucination, Appearances, and Underspecification. In so doing, it also suggests a positive account of illusions and hallucinations, as well as the intentional (object-directed) and perspectival (from here) aspects of perception.