Roger Walcott Sperry
Leo Semionovich Vygotsky
Jung
Charles Robert Darwin
Arthur Schopenhauer
Wandering North Magnetic Pole
Lawn
Chickadee
Sancho Panza kept on drinking......!
What the plants have to 'say'
Carl Woese compared the genetic sequence of many d…
Van Allen Belt
Figure 7.8 Arc of Instablity
Перестро́йка / гла́сность ~ Perestroika / Glasnos…
Library of Alexandria
Gutenberg Bible
ENCYCLOPEDIE
Sycamore
At peace.....
Final vocabulary
Eye Like Yours
Reading -- thinking, feeling, anticipating.....
Red House
Buddha's smile & Cognitive Science
THE GAP
Darwin
Emile Zatopek
Advantage Asia?
Man and the Mind......
Untitled
The Scream
Evening Sky
Homunculus
At Walden June 2008 (Replica)
^^
Land Area -- Container Metaphors
Time
Sun dial
^^
Hanumanth Gundi falls / Waterfall effect
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
- Photo replaced on 27 Jun 2018
-
11 visits
Ivo Kohler
Portrait after frontispiece photograph in: Spillmann, L., and B. Wooten, eds. 1984. Sensory Experience, Adaptation and Perception, Festscrift in Honor of Professor Ivo Kohler, Hillsdale, N.J.: Erlbaum
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Kohler's methods were in the phenomenological tradition of Gestalt psychology, "although my attitude toward this is somewhat ambivalent. I do not deny what is called 'organization' in perception, but I believe we have found a way to change this organization by prolonged exposure to certain kinds of stimulation". This ambiguity is expressed in the portrait of Kohler: while all the parts of the portrait are inverted its organization as a Gestalt is of a normally upright face. It also reflects an unresolved riddle associated with phenomenological reports of vision during inversion -- whether the visual world appears normal after perceptual-motor adaptation. ~ Page 199
Sign-in to write a comment.