Abstract
The Molyneux question asks: would a blind person, who knows spheres and cubes
only from touch, be able to recognize these shapes visually immediately upon
becoming sighted, without touching them? Molyneux himself answered no. Locke
accepted Molyneux’s negative answer. But Locke’s answer appears inconsistent with
the doctrine of common sensibles, according to which some ideas are given in more
than one sense modality. Motivated by alleviating this tension, philosophers have put
forth several interpretations of Locke’s views on shape perception. Here I motivate a
novel interpretation of Locke that can better resolve the tension.