Binocular vision and image location before Kepler

Archive for History of Exact Sciences 72 (5):497-546 (2018)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Kepler’s 1604 Optics proposed among many other things a new way of locating the place of the image under reflection or refraction. He rejected the “perspectivist” method that had been used through antiquity and the Middle Ages, whereby the image was located on the perpendicular between the object and the mirror. Kepler faulted the method for requiring a metaphysical commitment to the action of final causes in optics: the notion that the image was at that place because it was best or appropriate for it to be there, and for no other discernible reason. Kepler’s new theory relied on binocular vision and depth perception to determine the location of the image. No final causes were required, and he showed that the image would in general not be found on the cathetus. According to modern scholarship, Kepler’s theory was part of his revolutionary transformation of the science of optics, and his abandonment of perspectivist optics; as a consequence, the theory of binocular vision is also thought to be original with him. This article demonstrates that the very same theory of binocular image location was set out by Giovanni Battista Benedetti some twenty years earlier, and his writings on this subject may have been Kepler’s unacknowledged source for his own theory. Furthermore, another mathematician, Simon Stevin, developed much the same theory at the same time as Kepler and, it seems, independently of either Benedetti or Kepler. The discovery of these other binocular theories, especially Benedetti’s, requires us to recognize that Kepler’s revolution emerged out of a wider dissatisfaction with the foundations of perspectivist optics, which other lesser-known opticians resolved in much the same way that Kepler did.

Other Versions

No versions found

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 100,888

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Kepler’s optics without hypotheses.Sven Dupré - 2012 - Synthese 185 (3):501-525.
Kepler and the Telescope.Antoni Malet - 2003 - Annals of Science 60 (2):107-136.
The imitation of nature.John Hyman - 1989 - New York, NY, USA: Blackwell.
Kepler's Archetypes in Discovery and Justification.Rhonda M. Martens - 1997 - Dissertation, The University of Western Ontario (Canada)

Analytics

Added to PP
2019-01-25

Downloads
23 (#939,354)

6 months
5 (#1,038,502)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?