ABSTRACT

This anthology translates eighteen papers by Italian philosopher and experimental psychologist Paolo Bozzi (1930-2003), bringing his distinctive and influential ideas to an English-speaking audience for the first time. The papers cover a range of methodological and experimental questions concerning the phenomenology of perception and their theoretical implications, with each one followed by commentary from leading international experts. In his laboratory work, Bozzi investigated visual and auditory perception, such as our responses to pendular motion and bodies in freefall, afterimages, transparency effects, and grouping effects in dot lattices and among sounds (musical notes). Reflecting on the results of his enquiries against the background of traditional approaches to experimentation in these fields, Bozzi took a unique realist stance that challenges accepted approaches to perception, arguing that experimental phenomenology is neither a science of the perceptual process nor a science of the appearances; it is a science of how things are. The writings collected here offer an important resource for psychologists of perception and philosophers, as well as for researchers in cognitive science.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

part 9I|70 pages

chapter 1|28 pages

Experimental phenomenology

chapter 3|12 pages

Phenomenal experience, epistemic experience and psychological experience

Notes towards an epistemology of the phenomenological experimental method

chapter |3 pages

Comments on phenomenal experience, epistemic experience and psychological experience

Notes towards an epistemology of the phenomenological experimental method

part 79II|102 pages

chapter 7|10 pages

Five varieties of stimulus error

chapter 8|8 pages

Seeing as

chapter |5 pages

Comments on seeing as

part 211IV|157 pages

chapter 12|21 pages

A new factor of perceptual grouping

Demonstration in terms of pure Experimental Phenomenology

chapter |6 pages

Comments on a new factor of perceptual grouping

Demonstration in terms of pure Experimental Phenomenology

chapter 16|20 pages

Tertiary qualities