Summary |
This category is concerned with Berkeley's famous "heterogeneity thesis" propounded in his New Theory of Vision. Berkeley’s thesis says, roughly, that perception of objects in motion is the result of empirically integrating two distinct sensory modalities: sight and touch. Important works pertaining to Berkeley's chief claim are codified. Whether or not Berkeley's empirical conjectures are correct is somewhat moot, since his theory did lay the foundations for the very idea that human perception is inherently active as opposed to innate or passive. This idea motivates much research involving perception, in both psychology and the philosophy of mind. Berkeley's New Theory is indeed a watershed for the philosophy of perception. |