Astérion (Dec 2021)

Sur quelques théories de la représentation visuelle avant Kepler

  • Dominique Demange

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4000/asterion.7276
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25

Abstract

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This article attempts to understand the extent to which, and the terms in which, it was possible to speak of sensory vision as a psychic representation before Johannes Kepler inaugurated the new optics in his famous Paralipomena ad Vitellionem (1604). The following argument is taken as a starting point: That it is only within this new paradigm, dissociating the physical process of vision from its psychic treatment, one can legitimately speak of vision as a mental construction or a representation. After examining this question in the light of several ancient and medieval theories, the article reaches a different conclusion. The question of vision as a mental representation dates as far back as Aristotle, conferring to the internal senses (phantasia, common sense) the major function in elaborating the content of perception. Additionally, some theories under neo-Platonic influence, such as those of Augustine or Avicenna, clearly conceive direct vision as a psychic representation. In Paralipomena ad Vitellionem, Kepler distinguishes optics as a physical science of light from the psychology of perception; but the latter has already a long history, as does the idea of vision as a mental representation.

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