Abstract
It will be obvious to anyone with a slight knowledge of twentieth-century analytic
philosophy that one of the central themes of this kind of philosophy is the nature of
perception: the awareness of the world through the five senses of sight, touch, smell,
taste, and hearing. Yet it can seem puzzling, from our twenty-first-century perspective,
why there is a distinctively philosophical problem of perception at all. For when
philosophers ask ‘what is the nature of perception?’, the question can be confused with
other, purely empirical, questions. For example: how do our sense-organs actually work?
What are the mechanisms of smell and taste? How do vision and touch actually provide
us with information about the world around us? There is much general agreement, in its
broad outlines, about how to answer such questions empirically; but it is not clear what
role, if any, philosophy has to play in answering these empirical questions. So if these
were the only questions about the nature of perception, then it would not be clear exactly
what the philosophy of perception is supposed to be about.