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  1. 1 de ago. de 2014 · The Innocent Eye develops a way of understanding vision inspired by recent literature in situated cognition. To explain why the world looks as it does, the book appeals to the structure of the environment in which we are situated and to our attunement to that environment.

  2. The ghastly horror of trench warfare and the sheer scale of human destruction shattered for ever Europe's optimism and belief in inexorable progress. Rivers, as a doctor responsible for treating severely traumatised soldiers sent home from the battlefield, found himself at the very centre of the crisis precipitated by the war.

  3. Hace 5 días · Quick Reference. A term used by Gombrich and the American philosopher Nelson Goodman (1906–98) to refer to a common assumption that images do not need to be read, whereas Gombrich stressed ‘the beholder's share’: ‘reading an image, like the reception of any other message, is dependent on prior knowledge of possibilities; we ...

  4. In The Innocent Eye, Nico Orlandi argues that vision is not a cognitive process. In particular, she argues that forming subject-level visual representations that are available for reasoning should not itself be understood as a process of inference.

  5. The concept of the innocent eye rests conceived ability to be open to raw sensation; to see, as it were, perceiving.

  6. 23 de ene. de 2016 · In The Innocent Eye: Why Vision is Not a Cognitive Process, Nico Orlandi gives a much-needed explication and defence of the embedded cognition paradigm as it pertains to vision in particular.

  7. In The Innocent Eye, Nico Orlandi defends a position that aligns with this second, world-centered tradition, but that also respects some of the insights of constructivism. Orlandi develops an...

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