Abstract
It can seem puzzling that there is such a thing as the philosophy of sense-perception.
Psychology and the neurosciences study the mechanisms by which our senses receive
information about the environment. So conceived, perception is a psychological and
physiological process, whose underlying nature will be discovered empirically. Since
few philosophers these days would presume to interfere with the empirical products
of these sciences, the question arises as to the nature of philosophy’s distinctive role
in the study of perception. There is not a philosophy of digestion as there is a
philosophy of perception; so what is it, exactly, that the philosophy of perception is
supposed to do?