Affiliation:
1. Philosophy Department, Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA, USA
Abstract
Proponents of enactivism should be interested in exploring what notion of action best captures the type of action–perception link that the view proposes, such that it covers all the aspects in which our doings constitute and are constituted by our perceiving. This article proposes and defends the thesis that the notion of sensorimotor dependencies is insufficient to account for the reality of human perception and that the central enactive notion should be that of perceptual practices. Sensorimotor enactivism is insufficient because it has no traction on socially dependent perceptions (SDPs), which are essential to the role and significance of perception in our lives. Since the social dimension is a central desideratum in a theory of human perception, enactivism needs a notion that accounts for such an aspect. This article sketches the main features of the Wittgenstein-inspired notion of perceptual practices as the central notion to understand perception. Perception, I claim, is properly understood as woven into a type of social practices that includes food, dance, dress, and music. More specifically, perceptual practices are the enactment of culturally structured, normatively rich techniques of commerce of meaningful multi- and intermodal perceptible material. I argue that perceptual practices explain three central features of SDP: attentional focus, aspects’ salience, and modal-specific harmony-like relations.
Subject
Behavioral Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Places for reasoning;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2024-08-07
2. 'LOVE' IS ALL YOU NEED: AN ATTEMPT AT CRITICAL CONCEPTUAL ACCOUNT;Lege artis. Language yesterday, today, tomorrow;2023-07-09
3. Neither race nor ethnicity: Latinidad as a social affordance;Journal of Social Philosophy;2022-12-16
4. Socio-cultural norms in ecological psychology: The education of intention;Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences;2022-03-04
5. Social enactivism about perception—reply to McGann;Adaptive Behavior;2019-03-07