ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1987, this title intended to historically reveal, through tracing Gibson’s development, the substance of his views and how they bore upon general philosophical issues in theories of knowledge, and to investigate in detail the historical context of Gibson’s theoretical position within psychology. Though the author has included a history of Gibson’s perceptual research and experimentation, the focus is to explicate the ‘dynamic abstract form’ of Gibson’s ecological approach. His emphasis is philosophical and theoretical, attempting to bring out the direction Gibson was moving in and how such changes could restructure the theoretical fabric of psychology. He devotes considerable attention to the Greeks, Medievalists, and the founders of the Scientific Revolution. This is because Gibson’s theoretical challenge runs deep into the structure of western thought. The authors’ central goal was to set Gibson’s ecological theory within the historical context of fundamental philosophical-scientific issues.

part I|54 pages

The Philosophy of Knowledge and the Science of Perception

chapter 2|11 pages

Pre-Socratic Philosophy and Science

chapter 3|11 pages

Platonic and Aristotelian Philosophy

part II|114 pages

The Psychology and Biology of Knowledge

chapter 5|20 pages

The Scientific Revolution

chapter 6|20 pages

Berkeley and Empiricist Psychology

chapter 7|11 pages

Nineteenth Century Structural Psychology

chapter 8|29 pages

Evolution and Functional Psychology

chapter 9|17 pages

Gestalt Psychology

chapter 10|15 pages

The Antecedents of Gibson’s Psychophysics

part III|101 pages

The Psychophysics of Perception

chapter 11|21 pages

The Genesis of Gibson’s Psychophysics

chapter 13|20 pages

Gibson’s Psychophysics

chapter 14|24 pages

The Genesis of Ecological Psychology

part IV|88 pages

Ecological Psychology and Perceptual Epistemology