
Mark Eli Kalderon Presents An Original Study In The Philosophy Of Perception Written In The Medium Of Historiography. He Considers The Phenomenology And Metaphysics Of Sensory Presentation Through The Examination Of An Ancient Aporia. Specifically, He Argues That A Puzzle About Perception At A Distance Is Behind Empedocles' Theory Of Vision. Empedocles Conceives Of Perception As A Mode Of Material Assimilation, But This Raises A Puzzle About Color Vision, Since Color Vision Seems To Present Colors That Inhere In Distant Objects. But If The Colors Inhere In Distant Objects How Can They Be Taken In By The Organ Of Sight And So Be Palpable To Sense? Aristotle Purports To Resolve This Puzzle In His Definition Of Perception As The Assimilation Of Sensible Form Without The Matter Of The Perceived Particular. Aristotle Explicitly Criticizes Empedocles, Though He Is Keen To Retain The Idea That Perception Is A Mode Of Assimilation, If Not A Material Mode. Aristotle's Notorious Definition Has Long Puzzled Commentators. Kalderon Shows How, Read In Light Of Empedoclean Puzzlement About The Sensory Presentation Of Remote Objects, Aristotle's Definition Of Perception Can Be Better Understood. Moreover, When So Read, The Resulting Conception Of Perception Is Both Attractive And Defensible.
This book investigates the historical and philosophical origins of Aristotle's definition of perception as the assimilation of sensible form without matter. Mark Eli Kalderon, a scholar of ancient philosophy, utilizes a historiographical approach to re-examine the relationship between Empedocles' theories of vision and Aristotle's subsequent metaphysical framework. By situating Aristotle's definition within the context of ancient puzzles regarding perception at a distance, Kalderon argues that this interpretation renders the Aristotelian view both coherent and philosophically defensible.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars frequently note the technical rigor of Kalderon's argument and his ability to bridge the gap between historical exegesis and contemporary metaphysical inquiry. Experts highlight this work as a significant contribution to the study of Aristotelian philosophy, particularly for those interested in the intersection of phenomenology and ancient epistemology.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oup Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191027731
ISBN-13:
9780191027734
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!