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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.
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