Richard Wollheim was hardly alone in supposing that his account of pictorial depiction implies that a trompe-l’œil is not a depiction. I recommend removing this apparent implication by inserting a Kant-style version of aspect-perception into his account. I characterize the result as Neo-Wollheimian and retain the centrality of Wollheim’s notion of twofoldedness in the theory of depiction, but I demote it to a contingent feature of depictions and I criticize his employment of it for determining the category of both the trompe-l’œil and depictions in general
This paper proposes a parallel between the theories of pictorial representation put forward by Edmun...
Christopher Peacocke seeks to account for the nature of depiction in terms of a distinctive kind of ...
In this paper, I first want to vindicate Wollheim’s idea that seeing-in, taken as the twofold phenom...
Richard Wollheim was hardly alone in supposing that his account of pictorial depiction implies that ...
Does the relation of seeing something as another really differ from seeing the one as resembling the...
A crucial question in the study of picture perception asks about whether, when perceiving an object ...
It is generally agreed that Edmund Husserl’s theory of depiction describes a three-fold experience o...
This thesis begins with a succinct survey of theories of depiction and then turns to two highly infl...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98275/1/1540-6245.00049.pd
When Wittgenstein claims that “the expression of a change of aspect is the expression of a new perce...
Wittgenstein’s remarks on “seeing-as” have influenced several scholars working on depiction. They ha...
In this paper, I will examine Richard Wollheim's seeing-in theory of picture representation, and par...
This paper develops Richard Wollheim’s claim that the proper appreciation of a picture involves not ...
Philosophers of perception and psychologists first studied ‘multistable’ or ‘reversible’ figures, Ki...
In this paper Wollheim's and Walton's theory of pictorial representation are scrutinized and compar...
This paper proposes a parallel between the theories of pictorial representation put forward by Edmun...
Christopher Peacocke seeks to account for the nature of depiction in terms of a distinctive kind of ...
In this paper, I first want to vindicate Wollheim’s idea that seeing-in, taken as the twofold phenom...
Richard Wollheim was hardly alone in supposing that his account of pictorial depiction implies that ...
Does the relation of seeing something as another really differ from seeing the one as resembling the...
A crucial question in the study of picture perception asks about whether, when perceiving an object ...
It is generally agreed that Edmund Husserl’s theory of depiction describes a three-fold experience o...
This thesis begins with a succinct survey of theories of depiction and then turns to two highly infl...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98275/1/1540-6245.00049.pd
When Wittgenstein claims that “the expression of a change of aspect is the expression of a new perce...
Wittgenstein’s remarks on “seeing-as” have influenced several scholars working on depiction. They ha...
In this paper, I will examine Richard Wollheim's seeing-in theory of picture representation, and par...
This paper develops Richard Wollheim’s claim that the proper appreciation of a picture involves not ...
Philosophers of perception and psychologists first studied ‘multistable’ or ‘reversible’ figures, Ki...
In this paper Wollheim's and Walton's theory of pictorial representation are scrutinized and compar...
This paper proposes a parallel between the theories of pictorial representation put forward by Edmun...
Christopher Peacocke seeks to account for the nature of depiction in terms of a distinctive kind of ...
In this paper, I first want to vindicate Wollheim’s idea that seeing-in, taken as the twofold phenom...