A Pluralists Guide to Solving Molyneuxs Problem
English
By (author): Brian Glenney
This book presents a novel pluralist strategy for answering Molyneuxs 300+ year old conundrum: Would a person, born blind but given sight, identify a shape previously known only by their touch? The author interweaves historical scholarship with contemporary philosophical work and empirical research on animal, infant, and adult human perception.
The author argues that we need a new approach to Molyneuxs problem because we do not know what the problem is really about, and it is untestable because a Molyneux subject cannot be physically realized. He criticizes Molyneuxs question for its simplistic taxonomy of the blind that groups significant individual differences into a singular ontology. Research in the cognitive sciences confirms that various kinds of blindness can co-occur, such as ocular, cortical, and psychological blindness. Therefore, the author adopts an explanatory pluralism for answering Molyneuxs problem, which includes no, yes, and no answer answers according to the domain of inquiry being used. This account provides a research-based answer to a long-standing problem using previously unheeded insights particularly from animal crossmodal perception studies to retell a more complex story of perception: its levels of explanation and integration.
A Pluralists Guide to Solving Molyneuxs Problem will be of interest to researchers and advanced students working in comparative psychology, epistemology, history of philosophy, philosophy of perception.
See moreWill deliver when available. Publication date 31 Dec 2024