ABSTRACT

Richard Gregory was one of the major scientific thinkers of our time. Originally published in 1986, here he presents essays on the rich subject of perception. How we experience colours, shapes, sounds, touches, tickles, tastes and smells is a mysterious and rich inquiry. Wonderful as these sensations are, though, he argues that perception becomes really interesting when we consider how objects are identified and located in space and time as things we interact with, using our intelligence to understand them. Gregory’s essays convey the crucial importance of the major scientists and their achievements in the study of perception; but they also show us how much we can learn from our surroundings, our language, our times, our successes and our failures. Why are we so often fooled, in scientific as well as everyday life?

part I|27 pages

Amusing

chapter 1|6 pages

Laughing Matter

chapter 2|3 pages

Toy Mates

chapter 3|2 pages

Matches to Murder

chapter 4|2 pages

When Worlds Collide

chapter 5|3 pages

Swatting Truth

chapter 7|4 pages

Living with Robots

part II|105 pages

Musing

chapter 8|13 pages

Magical Mechanisms of Mind

chapter 9|11 pages

Is Consciousness Sensational Inference?

chapter 10|4 pages

Conjuring

chapter 11|13 pages

The Oddest Perceptions: Illusions

chapter 12|9 pages

Reflecting on Mirrors

chapter 15|3 pages

Samuel Butler: Nowhere in a Mirror

chapter 16|5 pages

On First Reading a Book by Einstein

chapter 18|4 pages

The Genius of Alan Turing

chapter 20|8 pages

Is ESP Crystal Balls?

chapter 21|10 pages

This Estranged Intelligence

part III|82 pages

Using

chapter 22|7 pages

Inventing

chapter 23|4 pages

Half-Baked Designs

chapter 24|10 pages

The Fourth Dimension of 3-D

chapter 27|6 pages

Spelling Spells

chapter 28|8 pages

Whatever Happened to Information Theory?

chapter 29|3 pages

Designing Designers

chapter 30|11 pages

Journey to Unconsciousness with Ketamine

chapter 31|12 pages

Engineering Mind