Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

Repository | Book | Chapter

179599

Perception, representation, and the forms of action

towards an historical epistemology

Mark W. Wartofsky

pp. 215-237

Abstract

Among the things which are generally taken to change, historically, are ideas, theories, social systems, technologies, customs, beliefs. Biological evolutionary changes or developments are often distinguished from and sometimes compared with these historical changes: Thus, species-change, or the evolution of particular organs or traits, or even geological change are taken to be processes of natural transformation, as distinct from those post-natural or cultural changes which may be characterized as historical, and which involve human action and human history distinctively. Thus, for example, cultural evolution is contrasted with natural or biological evolution, the "noösphere' is contrasted with the "biosphere', and transhistorical species-specific traints, such as erect posture, or speech are contrasted with culturally variant features, such as particular natural languages, or even more differentially, styles or customs or political systems.

Publication details

Published in:

Cohen Robert S, Wartofsky Mark W (1985) A portrait of twenty-five years: Boston colloquium for the philosophy of science 1960–1985. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 215-237

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-5345-1_16

Full citation:

Wartofsky Mark W (1985) „Perception, representation, and the forms of action: towards an historical epistemology“, In: R.S. Cohen & M.W. Wartofsky (eds.), A portrait of twenty-five years, Dordrecht, Springer, 215–237.