A central goal of the philosophy of perception is to uncover the nature of sensory capacities. Ideally, we would like an account that specifies what conditions need to be met in order for an organism to count as having the capacity to sense or perceive its environment. And, on the assumption that sensory states are the kinds of things that can be accurate or inaccurate, a further goal of the philosophy of perception is to identify the accuracy conditions for sensory states. In this paper I recommend a novel approach to these core issues, one that draws heavily on game-theoretic treatments of signalling in nature. A benefit of the approach is that it helps us to understand why biologists attribute sensory powers to such a diverse range of or...
Plants actively gather information about their environments via a range of sensory modalities and re...
Hundertmark F. Explaining how to perceive the new: causal-informational teleosemantics and productiv...
We perceive in many ways. But several dubious presuppositions about the senses mask this diversity o...
This is the accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by Oxford University Press. Reproduced b...
The present article is an attempt to give - in the frame of the theory of the organism-environment s...
Since antique Greece, philosophers as Plato and Aristotle discussed about the phenomena of senses a...
Natural scenes and ecological signals are inherently complex and understanding of their perception a...
As animals move through their environments they are subjected to an endless barrage of sensory signa...
Receptors systems are our window on the world, the tools that relate us to the outside world and all...
Human perception is taken here as the physicochemical interface between the outside world and the hu...
Kathleen Akins argues that the traditional view of sensory systems assumes too quickly that their ...
How do the senses work? How do physical stimuli get transformed into signals in the nervous system? ...
Research on sensory processing or the way animals see, hear, smell, taste, feel and electrically and...
How ought we differentiate the senses? For example, what distinguishes vision from audition from olf...
The five basic senses of vision, taste, smell, hearing, and touch form the very crux of our ability ...
Plants actively gather information about their environments via a range of sensory modalities and re...
Hundertmark F. Explaining how to perceive the new: causal-informational teleosemantics and productiv...
We perceive in many ways. But several dubious presuppositions about the senses mask this diversity o...
This is the accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by Oxford University Press. Reproduced b...
The present article is an attempt to give - in the frame of the theory of the organism-environment s...
Since antique Greece, philosophers as Plato and Aristotle discussed about the phenomena of senses a...
Natural scenes and ecological signals are inherently complex and understanding of their perception a...
As animals move through their environments they are subjected to an endless barrage of sensory signa...
Receptors systems are our window on the world, the tools that relate us to the outside world and all...
Human perception is taken here as the physicochemical interface between the outside world and the hu...
Kathleen Akins argues that the traditional view of sensory systems assumes too quickly that their ...
How do the senses work? How do physical stimuli get transformed into signals in the nervous system? ...
Research on sensory processing or the way animals see, hear, smell, taste, feel and electrically and...
How ought we differentiate the senses? For example, what distinguishes vision from audition from olf...
The five basic senses of vision, taste, smell, hearing, and touch form the very crux of our ability ...
Plants actively gather information about their environments via a range of sensory modalities and re...
Hundertmark F. Explaining how to perceive the new: causal-informational teleosemantics and productiv...
We perceive in many ways. But several dubious presuppositions about the senses mask this diversity o...