Qua Seeing-in, Pictorial Experience is a Superstrongly Cognitively Penetrated Perception Cover Image
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Qua Seeing-in, Pictorial Experience is a Superstrongly Cognitively Penetrated Perception
Qua Seeing-in, Pictorial Experience is a Superstrongly Cognitively Penetrated Perception

Author(s): Alberto Voltolini
Subject(s): Aesthetics, Cognitive Psychology, Neuropsychology, Sociology of Art
Published by: Eesti Kunstiteadlaste Ühing
Keywords: Qua Seeing-in; Pictorial Experience; Superstrongly Cognitively Penetrated Perception;

Summary/Abstract: According to Richard Wollheim, pictorial experience is constituted by the sui generis twofold perceptual experience of seeing-in, whose content is (partially at least) conceptual. In this paper, I maintain that if a seeing-in experience is suitably reconceived, Wollheim’s ideas can be justified. I want to claim, first, that a seeing-in experience is the paradigmatic case of a superstrongly cognitively penetrated experience. By ‘superstrongly cognitively penetrated’, I mean: 1) a seeing-in experience is strongly cognitively penetrated; 2) the content of a seeing-in experience in that fold features that experience as a whole, i.e. as regards the temporal entirety of the perceptual process underlying it, for a concept is needed to discriminate the content of the recognitional fold from the content of the configurational fold. Second, I stress that a seeing-in experience is a genuine, though admittedly sui generis, perceptual experience. Hence, its being superstrongly cognitively penetrated does not undermine its perceptual character.

  • Issue Year: 29/2020
  • Issue No: 03+04
  • Page Range: 13-30
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English