Loading...

Perception Reconsidered – The Process Point of View

by Franz Riffert (Volume editor)
©2007 Conference proceedings 236 Pages

Summary

The collection of papers of this book discuss Whitehead’s bold theory of perception from different angles. According to the major perspectives the book is divided into two major parts: the philosophical and the psychological perspective. The four philosophical papers focus on: the relation between Whitehead’s theory of perception and his account of the phases of concrescence, the nature of causal explanations in Whitehead’s theory of perception, a comparative study on Kitaro Nishida’s philosophy of pure experience and Whitehead’s philosophy of perception, and a contrasting account of Whitehead’s theory of perception with that of Deleuze. In the five papers of part II of the book («the psychological perspective»), some basic guidelines for conducting process-oriented psychological experiments on perceptgenesis are given. Then Whitehead’s tri-modal theory of perception in the light of microgenetic research results is discussed. A comparison of Whitehead’s position of the construction of solid objects with Piaget’s account of the constructive development of the ’object permanent’ in the young child follows. In the fourth paper James Gibson’s early position on perception is compared with Whitehead’s account. Finally it is shown that Whitehead’s theory of perception may provide a mode of access to nonordinary experiences and an explanation for the emergence of nonordinary states of consciousness.

Details

Pages
236
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631535462
Language
English
Keywords
Wahrnehmung Prozessphilosophie Process Philosophy Microgenesis Whitehead, Alfred North Percept Genesis Aufsatzsammlung
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. 233 pp., num. fig. and tables, 2 col. fig.

Biographical notes

Franz Riffert (Volume editor)

The Editor: Franz G. Riffert studied philosophy, theology, psychology and education at Salzburg University (Austria). He received grants to study at the Catholic University of Eichstätt (Germany) and at the Center for Process Studies, Los Angeles (USA). Since 1995 he has been working at the department for educational research at Salzburg University. His interests focus on studies in empirical education (diagnosis, intervention, methods of instruction, teacher training, school development, and self-evaluation) and philosophical foundations of education (with special emphasis on the works of A. N. Whitehead and K. R. Popper).

Previous

Title: Perception Reconsidered – The Process Point of View