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Philosophy of mind in the twentieth and twenty first centuries the history of the philosophy of mind volume 6 ( PDFDrive ) (1) 133

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Wertheimer extended this theory to the perception of shape and rhythm.. According to Gestalt theory, a perceptual scene has properties that the parts – even when considered together – do

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Motion is a structured whole or ‘Gestalten’ with its own ontological status and phenomenology

Wertheimer extended this theory to the perception of shape and rhythm His model was then developed by his colleagues in Berlin, Wolfang Köhler and Kurt Koffka (Koffka 1935; Köhler 1920) According to Gestalt theory, a perceptual scene has properties that the parts – even when considered together – do not have Gestaltists were interested not in how the parts compose a whole, but rather in how the structure

of a whole affects its subparts They contrasted structural atomism, with holism This holistic thesis had an effect in philosophy, prompting some theorists to question whether appearances are simple and unadulterated in the way in which sense-data theory and structuralism thought they were (Hanson 1958) Accord-ing to holism, no appearance is what it is independently of how it is situated in a whole The way an item looks is affected by the way other items in the perceptual

field look Thus Gestalt psychology influenced views that questioned the

neutral-ity of perception, a topic on which we will return in the next section (2.2).

Gestalt theorists took themselves to be discovering principles of perceptual organization that are not acquired through experience, or association, and that organize whole appearances

Although Gestaltists were primarily concerned with rejecting the atomistic con-victions of structuralism, they also held views about the physiology of perceiving Köhler proposed two related ideas One was that the brain was a dynamic, physi-cal system that converged towards an equilibrium of minimum energy This idea predates contemporary accounts of the brain based on dynamics and predictive coding (Clark 2013) A second proposal was that the causal mechanism underly-ing perception was given by a ‘physical Gestalt’ or an electromagnetic field gener-ated by events in neurons.12

Some of these ideas were later shown to be problematic The notion of a physi-cal Gestalt, for example, was in trouble when it was found that disrupting electri-cal brain fields did not seriously affect perceptual abilities (Lashley et al 1951) These physiological findings may have contributed to Gestalt psychology los-ing its appeal in the second half of the 20th century The development of com-puter science, of cognitive science and of neuroscience may also have offered better theoretical frameworks Work on perceptual principles of organization and

on the emergent structure of perceptual experience, however, continues to this day (Wagemans et al 2012)

2.2 Constructivism

Another powerful idea that shaped work on perception in the 20th century is the constructivist view that perception involves a type of unconscious inference Con-structivists stress that sensory stimulation is inadequate in perception In the case

of vision, what is projected on the retina consists of light intensities that can be caused by a number of environmental elements How do we get to see an object when all that is projected on the retina is light?

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