1. If the use of the word “perception” in phenomenology is defined by a relationship to reality, then this situation could be expressed as follows: the seeing of the planar mound is not a perception, but an ideation.
2. The given differentiations may also serve to repudiate the objection that the following considerations represent phenomenological reifications of psychological processes.
3. One might also think here of the transition from the plain to the mountains, in places where there are woods nearer or further away in a number of directions, whilst open fields extend in other directions, etc.
4. It is possible that a “directed” area “without a boundary” may occasionally occur here.
5. The idea of the village as a thing of combat nevertheless changes very quickly where provisions, etc. are to be found “inside” the houses, which nevertheless retain their military characteristics.