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Jan 1999
ISBN 0262621290
512 pp.
3 illus.
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Sites of Vision
David Michael Levin

In recent years scholars from many disciplines have become interested in the "construction" of the human senses--in how the human environment shapes both how and what we perceive. Taking a very different approach to the question of construction, Sites of Vision turns to language and explores the ways in which the rhetoric of philosophy has formed the nature of vision and how, in turn, the rhetoric of vision has helped to shape philosophical thought. The central role of vision in relation to philosophy is evident in the vocabulary of the discipline--in words such as "speculation," "observation," "insight," and "reflection"; in metaphors such as "mirroring," "perspective," and "point of view"; and in methodological concepts such as "reflective detachment" and "representation." Because the history of vision is so pervasively reflected in the history of philosophy, it is possible for both vision and thought to achieve a greater awareness of their genealogy through the history of philosophy.

The fourteen contributors to Sites of Vision explore the hypothesis that the nature of visual perception about which philosophers talk must be explicitly recognized as a discursive construction, indeed a historical construction, in philosophical discourse.

Table of Contents
 Introduction
 From Acoustics to Optics: The Rise of the Metaphysical and Demise of the Melodic in Aristotle's Poetics
by P. Christopher Smith
 Aristotle and Specular Regimes: The Theater of Philosophical Discourse
by James I. Porter
 Discourses of Vision in Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics
by Catherine Wilson
 How to Write the History of Vision: Understanding the Relationship between Berkeley and Descartes
by Margaret Atherton
 Embodying the Eye of Humanism: Giambattista Vico and the Eye of Ingenium
by Sandra Rudnick Luft
6 "For Now We See Through a Glass Darkly": The Systematics of Hegel's Visual Imagery
by John Russon
 Sighting the Spirit: The Rhetorical Visions of Geist in Hegel's Encyclopedia
by John H. Smith
 Perspectives and Horizons: Husserl on Seeing the Truth
by Mary C. Rawlinson
 Ducks and Rabbits: Visuality in Wittgenstein
by William James Earle
 Dewey's Critique of Democratic Visual Culture and Its Political Implications
by Yaron Ezrahi
 Materialist Mutations of the Bilderverbot
 Hannah Arendt: The Activity of the Spectator
by Peg Birmingham
 Keeping Foucault and Derrida in Sight: Panopticism and the Politics of Subversion
by David Michael Levin
 Difference and the Ruin of Representation in Gilles Deleuze
by Dorothea Olkowski
 Contributors
 Index
 
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