Review of Zenon Pylyshyn's Seeing and Visualizing: It's Not What You Think [Book Review]

PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 11 (2005)
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Abstract

This book has three principle aims: to show that neither vision nor mental imagery involves the creation or inspection of picture-like mental representations; to defend the claim that our visual processes are, in significant part, cognitively impenetrable; and to develop a theory of “visual indexes”. In what follows, I assess Pylyshyn’s success in realising each of these aims in turn. I focus primarily on his arguments against “picture theories” of vision and mental imagery, to which approximately half the book is devoted. I argue that Pylyshyn adopts an unnecessarily restricted interpretation of what it would be for mental representations to be picture-like, and that this leads him prematurely to reject the possibility of explaining the introspective evidence concerning the nature of mental imagery.

Author's Profile

Catharine Abell
University of Oxford

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