Annotation:Annotationen:The Control of Perception and the Construction of Reality: Epistemological Aspects of the Feedback-Control System/Tngpsx4fy7

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Annotation of Annotationen:The_Control_of_Perception_and_the_Construction_of_Reality:_Epistemological_Aspects_of_the_Feedback-Control_System
Annotation Comment
Last Modification Date 2020-06-16T11:59:44.659Z
Last Modification User User:Sarah Oberbichler
Annotation Metadata
^"permissions":^"read":ӶӺ,"update":ӶӺ,"delete":ӶӺ,"admin":ӶӺ°,"user":^"id":6,"name":"Sarah Oberbichler"°,"id":"Tngpsx4fy7","ranges":Ӷ^"start":"/divӶ3Ӻ/divӶ4Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ12Ӻ","startOffset":14,"end":"/divӶ3Ӻ/divӶ4Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ1Ӻ/divӶ12Ӻ/pӶ2Ӻ","endOffset":255°Ӻ,"quote":"Norwood Hanson argues, “People, not their eyes, see. Cameras and eyeballs, are blind” (1958, p. 9). Seeing requires organization. It is not possible to isolate the process, or to identify it with the activity of any particular level. It is systematically ambiguous. “To perceive” is equally systematically ambiguous. This ambiguity is precisely what is responsible for positing a “given” in sensation which is then “seen” or “perceived.”\nWe are not able to recover what is typically referred to as the given in sensation. In particular, we are not able to recover the original disturbance to level one, what the proverbial naive realist would try to refer to as the “physical quantities in the environment.” The neural computation at the input of level one permanently confounds the disturbance.\nWhat is difficult, of course, is getting used to the idea that what we see indicates the existence of a perceptual transformation and only secondarily and hypothetically something actually occurring in an external reality. (William T. Powers 1973, p. 24)","highlights":Ӷ^"jQuery321076768373452990552":^°°,^"jQuery321076768373452990552":^°°,^"jQuery321076768373452990552":^°°Ӻ,"text":"","order":"mw-content-text","category":"Prämisse3","data_creacio":1592301583940°