Perception and Its Modalities

Perception and Its Modalities by Dustin Stokes, published by Oxford University Press in 2015, is a comprehensive exploration of the various ways we perceive the world. This edition spans 494 pages and is presented in English. The book features nineteen essays contributed by philosophers and cognitive scientists, focusing on the nature of individual senses, their interrelations, and the perceptual content they extract from sensory information.
Readers will find a thorough examination of questions surrounding the distinctiveness of senses and their collaborative functions. The essays challenge the notion that perception is merely a collection of inputs from separate modalities, advocating instead for a more integrated understanding of how senses work together. Topics such as the epistemological implications of sensory interaction and the potential benefits or drawbacks of this collaboration are central to the discussions, providing a rich framework for understanding perception in the context of philosophy, epistemology, and cognitive psychology.
Official synopsis Publisher
This volume is about the many ways we perceive. In nineteen new essays, philosophers and cognitive scientists explore the nature of the individual senses, how and what they tell us about the world, and how they interrelate. They consider how the senses extract perceptual content from receptoral information and what kinds of objects we perceive and whether multiple senses ever perceive a single event. Questions pertaining to how many senses we have, what makes one sense distinct from another, and whether and why distinguishing senses may be useful feature prominently. Contributors examine the extent to which the senses act in concert, rather than as discrete modalities, and whether this influence is epistemically pernicious, neutral, or beneficial.
Many of the essays engage with the idea that it is unduly restrictive to think of perception as a collation of contents provided by individual sense modalities. Rather, contributors contend that to understand perception properly we need to build into our accounts the idea that the senses work together. In doing so, they aim to develop better paradigms for understanding the senses and thereby to move toward a better understanding of perception.
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