In the Eye's Mind: Vision and the Helmholtz-Hering ControversyOne of the most persistent controversies of modern science has dealt with human visual perception. It erupted in Germany during the 1860s as a dispute between physiologists Hermann von Helmholtz, Ewald Hering, and their schools. Well into the twentieth century these groups warred over the origins of our capacity to perceive space, over the retinal mechanisms that mediate color sensations, and over the role of mind, experience, and inference in vision. Here R. Steven Turner explores the impassioned exchanges of those rival schools, both to illuminate the clash of theory and to explore the larger role of controversy in the development of science. Controversy, he suggests, is constitutive of scientific change, and he uses the Helmholtz-Hering dispute to illustrate how polemics and tacit negotiation shape evolving theoretical stances. |
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... physical properties of rods and cones . Literature on the retina and the optic nerve had been compar- atively insignificant in the 1840s , but Table 1 shows that it averaged 2.5 percent of the total literature of the field from the ...
... physically formed upon the retina by the di- optrical apparatus of that eye . Writers typically explained this ... physical image on the retina is preserved in its transfer to the sensorium . Others merely noted that the conformity ...
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Other editions - View all
In the Eye's Mind: Vision and the Helmholtz-Hering Controversy R. S. Turner No preview available - 2016 |
In the Eye's Mind: Vision and the Helmholtz-Hering Controversy Roy Steven Turner No preview available - 1994 |
In the Eye's Mind: Vision and the Helmholtz-Hering Controversy R. S. Turner No preview available - 2014 |