The praxiology of perception: Visual orientations and practical action
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Inquiry
- Vol. 33  (3) , 251-272
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00201749008602223
Abstract
A range of arguments are presented to demonstrate that (1) human visual orientations are conceptually constituted (conceptâbound); (2) the conceptâboundedness of visual orientations does not require a cognitivist account according to which a mental process of âinferenceâ or of âinterpretationâ must be postulated to accompany a purely âopticalâ registration of âwavelengths of lightâ, âphotonsâ, or contentless âinformation'; (3) conceptâbound visual orientations are not all instances of âseeing asâ, contrary to some currently prominent cognitivist accounts; (4) the dispute between cognitivist and realist accounts about the phenomenon of âseeing asâ is spurious, and is based upon a confusion about the fundamental analytical distinction made by Wittgenstein between âseeingâ and âseeing as'; (5) âperceivingâ, âseeingâ, and âseeing asâ are but three of a large array of verbs of human visual orientation, and are not âmaster categoriesâ under which one can subsume these other modalities; (6) one cannot deduce a continuity of human visual orientation from a continuity of photonâphotoreceptor interaction, a point we characterize as the âstaggered characterâ of human visual orientations; (7) detailed attention to the grammars of the diverse verbs of human visual orientation can open up a domain of study which we here refer to as a âpraxiology of perception'; (8) the nature of such an inquiry can be illustrated with exemplary reference to the analysis of the properties of ânoticingâ as embedded in courses of practical action; and (9) such arguments, which claim that existing perceptual theories overly homogenize what is involved in visual orientations to the world, parallel those of Stroll, who proposes that standard accounts of âwhat is perceivedâ overly homogenize the perceptible environment.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
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