Abstract
The sensorimotor theory (Noe¨, 2004, in press) discusses a special instance of lack of perceptual experience despite no sensory impairment.
The phenomenon dubbed “experiential blindness” is cited as evidence for a constitutive relation between sensorimotor skills and
perceptual experience. Recently it has been objected (Adams & Aizawa, 2008; Aizawa, 2007) that the cases described by Noe¨ as experiential
blindness are cases of pure sensory deficit. This paper argues that while the objections bring out limitations of Noe¨’s sensorimotor
theory they do not do enough to challenge a robust perception–action interdependence claim. There are genuine cases of experiential
blindness and these are better explained by the hypothesis of the interdependence of perception and action rather than by a passive vision
approach. The cases provide support for a strong thesis of embodied cognition where ongoing sensorimotor dynamics non-trivially constrain
perceptual content