Acting on What You are Perceiving: The Two-Visual-Systems Hypothesis Revisited

Journal of Neurophilosophy 3 (1) (2024)
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Abstract

The two-visual-systems hypothesis proposed by Goodale and Milner is a radical one. If it were to be true, then our common sense such as we are acting on what we are perceiving should be completely abandoned. In this paper, I argue that the hypothesis over-generalizes what happens in simple tasks to what happens in complex tasks. By contrast, I demonstrate that what happens in complex tasks is compatible with our common sense. In a word, though what we are acting on may come apart from what we are perceiving in some cases, that is not the whole story.

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Bin Zhao
Peking University

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