"This is a remarkable book. Its claim is that perception is none
other than the recovery of causal history. One cannot but be struck
by the depth, novelty, and brilliance of Leyton's accounts, page after
page, of even the most minute and ordinary of perceptual phenomena --
claims which contradict virtually every previous treatment of these
phenomena."
-- Eleanor Rosch, Professor, University of
California, Berkeley
Michael Leyton's arguments about the nature of perception and
cognition are fascinating, exciting, and sure to be controversial. In
this investigation of the psychological relationship between shape and
time, Leyton argues compellingly that shape is used by the mind to
recover the past and as such it forms a basis for memory. He
elaborates a system of rules by which the conversion to memory takes
place and presents a number of detailed case studies -- in perception,
linguistics, art, and even political subjugation -- that support these
rules.
Leyton observes that the mind assigns to any shape a causal history
explaining how the shape was formed. We cannot help but perceive a
deformed can as a dented can. Moreover, by reducing the
study of shape to the study of symmetry, he shows that symmetry is
crucial to our everyday cognitive processing. Symmetry is the means
by which shape is converted into memory.
Perception is usually regarded as the recovery of the spatial layout
of the environment. Leyton, however, shows that perception is
fundamentally the extraction of time from shape. In doing so, he is
able to reduce the several areas of computational vision purely to
symmetry principles. Examining grammar in linguistics, he argues that
a sentence is psychologically represented as a piece of causal
history, an archeological relic disinterred by the listener so that
the sentence reveals the past. Again through a detailed analysis of
art he shows that what the viewer takes to be the experience of a
painting is in fact the extraction of time from the shapes of the
painting. Finally he highlights crucial aspects of the mind's attempt
to recover time in examples of political subjugation.
Michael Leyton is a professor in the Psychology Department at Rutgers
University. He is a recipient of the Presidential Young Investigatory
Award for outstanding work in cognitive science.
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