Abstract
This study aims to bring out the explanatory potential of embodied predictionism versus passive feed-forward model of sensory stimulation in the pursuit of a parsimonious naturalist account of sensation as a salient feature and an end point of conscious experience. Theoretical approaches towards sensory experience are tested against specific scenarios of the absence of observable or palpable qualities including but not limited to the thought-experimental phenomenon of negative synesthesia at the conclusion of the argument. . Predictionism is first explored in its own right only to be found insufficient to do justice to the actual mechanism behind full-blown immediate perception. A case is made for the soundness of predictionism reconciled with the doctrine of embodiment.
Publisher
Uniwersytet Lodzki (University of Lodz)
Reference9 articles.
1. Clark, A. (2015). Embodied Prediction, in: Metzinger, T. & Windt, J.M. (ed.), “Open MIND”.
2. Lupyan, G. & Clark, A. (2015). Words and the World: Predictive Coding and the Language-Perception-Cognition Interface, Current Directions in Psychological Science, vol 24, no. 4, pp. 279-284.
3. Hurvich, L. M. (1981). Color Vision. Sunderland, Massachusetts: Sinauer
4. Keeley, B. (1999). Fixing content and function in neurobiological systems: the neuroethology of electroreception. Biology and Philosophy 14: 395–430.
5. Maruszewski, T. (2001). Psychologia poznawcza. Gdańsk: Gdańskie Wydawnictwo Psychologiczne.