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Received the Undercover knit sleeve perfecto in the mail. Grail obtained. I had a second to try it on before running back to work.
@ARW: I dunno if I can help much, but if you're looking for stuff on perception other than what Fuumski has mentioned here maybe look at Merleau-Ponty or something. For more psych-oriented view of perception James Gibson has some really neat ****, but that might be less useful.
Received the Undercover knit sleeve perfecto in the mail. Grail obtained. I had a second to try it on before running back to work.
if you google vcu locker team video or something it's literally the team shouting "SWAG" over and over before a game
there's a entry on auditory perception in the stanford encyclopedia of philosophy actually but it's only helpful if your're comfortable w/ the analytic (as opposed to Continental) style of doing philosophy.
Can't think of anything outside zen at the moment and that stuff requires a lot of background and change in perspective, I dipped my toes a few times and it wasn't exactly easy.
Merleau-Ponty and Levinas both talk about perception but it'S mainly seeing and especially feeling (Levinas).
there's a entry on auditory perception in the stanford encyclopedia of philosophy actually but it's only helpful if your're comfortable w/ the analytic (as opposed to Continental) style of doing philosophy.
yes, this is where you should start, both for the helpful overview and for the normally extensive bibliography. the sep also has an entry on 'sounds': http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/s...ntries/sounds/
Thanks a lot guys. re Fuuma, yeah the only things I could think of were Buddhist and Hindu stuff, don't want to go in that direction. I will look into the Schop. AFI, Fuuma is correct so far as I know, MP is all about the eye and seeing, Levinas is about feeling. What I'm concerned with actually is the privileging of speech over writing that I think begins with Socrates/Plato (though perhaps earlier ancient Greek) and it's relationship to the supremacy of the visual over the auditory in art, and lastly I suppose the way in which these currents have infected not only one another but also literature/poetry where they have been echoed but also sometimes overturned or subverted. I am simultaneously working on sound and video art, the thesis will be tied to a series I am working... Thanks for the Stanford recs kwoyeu, ghostface. Actually I took an analytic seminar last semester so hopefully I'll be alright, though we'll see how this fits in with what I'm thinking
Thanks a lot guys.
It always baffles me that philosophy (especially the deliberatly obscure continental version) speculates about issues such as perception, which so obivously is an empirical issue,better left to psychology and neuroscience. Of course the question of "percept" and phenomenology is valid (to some degree), but for instance that Stanford link on auditory perception just reads as "introduction to perception psychology", sans the rigorous experimentation.
Derrida discussed this, .