Bandini Aude Perception & Its Givenness 15
Bandini Aude Perception & Its Givenness 15
Bandini Aude Perception & Its Givenness 15
Introduction
161
would ‘seem odd that appetite should grow during no-existence as fast
as during existence.’4 Even if the hardcore idealist finally turned out to
be right, she should still account for the fact that in experience, we do
perceive objects as if they were mind-independent.
Thus, the presence and robustness of the given support both the
descriptive and ontologically realist idea that the mind can gain access
to some independent and substantial reality through perception and
the epistemological foundationalist view that perception endows the
subject’s thought with some sort of raw content that is non-arbitrary,
and henceforth exerts a normative constraint on her web of beliefs. This
normative force has traditionally been ascribed to the experience of
intuitive and unquestionable self-evidence. There is indeed something I
obviously cannot possibly doubt when I feel or experience, say, a tooth-
ache: namely, that I am experiencing a toothache, a specific kind of
pain from which I can perhaps distract my attention to some extent,
but which I cannot get rid of, or change into something of a different
nature at will, so to speak. How could I doubt what I am clearly and
immediately aware of? Perception seems to be responsive to how things
actually are in a way thought is clearly not, since whereas I can think of
things in their absence, I can only see, touch or taste them when they are
right here, present and given to me. Otherwise, it is not a genuine case
of perception.5 In that sense, the given is self-evident, certain, and its
apprehension is infallible. But what are we exactly justified in believing
on such a basis?
According to what Howard Robinson notoriously labeled ‘the
Phenomenal Principle’, the given deserves to be acknowledged as epis-
temically significant: ‘If there sensibly appears to a subject to be something
which possesses a particular sensible quality, then there is something of
which the subject is aware which does possess that sensible quality.’
(1994, p. 32) However, this Phenomenal Principle is often rejected
because it does not account for the difference between veridical percep-
tion and illusion – or worse, hallucination: in the well-known Müller-
Lyer illusion, for instance, it sensibly appears to the subject that one of
the shafts of the two arrows is shorter than the other; yet both of them
are actually of equal length. So, strictly speaking, there is no such thing
the subject is aware of that does actually instantiate that sensible prop-
erty: hence the illusion. As a consequence, the Phenomenal Principle
must be fallacious: my perception of an object O with the property f does
not entail that there is, right here, an object O that is f. I do not think,
however, that this objection, though relevant against naïve or direct
realism, ruins the more general idea that the given has a normative force,
Perception and Its Givenness 165
quite the opposite. Actually, the Müller-Lyer illusion would simply not
happen and would not be so disturbing, if there were nothing in what
we perceive that somehow forces us to judge that the perceived shafts
are of different lengths, even once we clearly know that it is actually
not the case. For instance, I could draw very carefully the Müller-Lyer
arrows in my philosophy of perception class, use a ruler to be sure that
both shafts are of equal length, and then take a few steps back from the
blackboard to check whether the trick works from my students’ vantage
point. Usually it does, and I find myself deceived, to some extent, as
much as they are. This happens because whereas all of us may eventually
either disbelieve or at least suspend our judgment, in any case, when we
look at the blackboard there is still something that is straightforwardly
given to us that our thought can neither alter nor correct, and which
gives rise to some intriguing intellectual embarrassment. Thus, despite
appearances to the contrary, the persistent perceptual illusion turns out
to be the best case for highlighting the epistemic authority of the given
via its immediate presence, robustness, or invariance with regard to our
will, thought, and even knowledge.6 Given the way a standard human
perceptual and cognitive system works, empirical psychologists would
agree that it is not by accident that one experiences and spontaneously
tends, or is disposed, to believe what one experiences or believes when
one is confronted with such textbook cases as the Müller-Lyer illusion.
Consequently, although the question of whether the direct objects of
perception are ordinary physical objects or rather some intermediate
appearances (sense-data, for instance) may still be debatable; the gist of
the Phenomenal Principle argument remains intact: there is obviously
something in perception that non-accidentally forces or constrains our
empirical beliefs or, more precisely, our rational acceptance, and as a
result provides a fundamental and primitive kind of knowledge that is
genuinely direct or non-inferential, and consequently unquestionable –
that is to say, true.
What does this have to do with the traditional a posteriori argument
for the given? I suggest that perception draws its epistemic authority
from the way it is apprehended or, in this case, the way it is forced or
imposed upon us, rather than from the content it conveys as such (the
same content which could appear in a belief). To avoid any further
ambiguity, let us then make a distinction between (1) the given as content
or object – that which is given, presented or provided by perceptual
experience and whose structure we shall leave in some relative obscu-
rity for now; and (2) the givenness, as the specific, vivid, robust, non-
discursive and non-inferential ‘mode of presentation’ or vehicle of this
166 Aude Bandini
content when brought about before the mind as we perceive the objects
in the surroundings. The givenness crucially involves some passivity
or receptivity on the subject’s side. We are now in a better position to
appreciate the relevance of Sellars’ diagnosis in the opening lines of
Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind: various things have been said to
be given in the history of philosophy, from sense-data to first principles,
physical objects, abstract entities, or propositions. They all pertain to
the pervasive ‘framework of givenness’ only to the extent that they are,
though perhaps wrongly, construed as the correlate of some intellectual
intuition, a pure receptivity rather than a mental act, strictly speaking,
in which none of the subject’s spontaneous, discursive, or conceptual
capacities are either involved or required. All that these givens have
in common is the phenomenally specific way they are taken or appre-
hended by the subject’s mind: their givenness. This means that given-
ness, as I view it and as it is pictured, though perhaps only implicitly,
in the writings of its proponents, pertains to the perceptual experience
itself (what does it feel to perceive or to have a perceptual experience)
rather than to the objects that are perceived.7 At least in first person and
under ordinary circumstances (as far as the subject knows, there are no
mirrors, no drugs were given to her, no evil demon and no mad scientist
is trying to deceive her, and so on), givenness through perception is
reasonably appraised as a reliable – though always fallible – indicator of
a genuine openness of one’s mind to the world, an openness that allows
for the acquisition of justified beliefs.
If I am right, both the a priori and a posteriori arguments that tradi-
tionally support the appeal to the given in the theory of knowledge
and perception appear not only to be coherent, but even to support
one another: the transcendental argument insists that for empirical
knowledge to be possible at all, there must be an epistemic stopping
point in the regressive chain of justifications, while the a posteriori argu-
ment holds that this stopping point is no mystery at all, and provides a
phenomenological criterion of not the given as content itself, but of the
specific direct relation – givenness through perception – we have with it.
If the given is imposed on our mind through perceptual experience, the
prior source of justification for our empirical beliefs is provided by the
specific phenomenal modality of givenness: immediacy, presence, unal-
terability – that is to say, mind-independence. These features, pertaining
to the modality rather than to the content of the given, are in the final
analysis the constitutive features and the genuine epistemically signifi-
cant elements provided by perception. Within the analytic tradition,
great emphasis has recently been put on the question of the structure
Perception and Its Givenness 167
Once again, the stress is not put on the representational content as such,
but on the way this content is given to us. The same unaltered content
(a proposition according to Pryor) occurs as the object of perceptual
experience and as the object of judgment (this proposition is true). The
relation holding between the perception and the corresponding judg-
ment looks non-inferential, irresistible as it were, and non-arbitrary
or contingent, but constitutive. I think Price is trying to pinpoint the
same ‘feeling’ or ‘phenomenal force’ when he depicts the specific way
cognitive states (that are clearly aiming at truth) occur in us, as it were,
non-inferentially and without any consideration of evidence, as we
experience our surrounding environment: perceptual consciousness
immediately throws us in a specific state of mind that he calls, with
Cook Wilson, ‘being under an impression that’.
It is, of course, quite difficult not to charge Price with falling prey to
blunt dogmatism. But a thought experiment might help to grasp
what both Pryor, and before him Price, are up to:13 suppose someone
whose perceptual and cognitive capacities are normal, but who would
be deprived of the capacity to feel or experience the specific phenom-
enology of perception. She would lack the sense of what it is to perceive,
although she knows what believing, daydreaming, or assuming are like.
We would here have the case of an individual who would perceive and
perhaps know what she is perceiving, without being phenomenally
aware that she is perceiving. In which cognitive state would she be
when facing, say, a glass of water? Contemporary psychiatry indicates
that some patients affected by depersonalization-derealization disorders
have a sense that the objects around them are not real and feel like they
live in a dream. It seems to me that this would be the situation of the
Perception and Its Givenness 171
open to revision and upon which the whole edifice of empirical knowl-
edge can rest. All our further beliefs about the world gain their positive
epistemic status from the epistemic relations they bear, either directly or
inferentially with them.
Now, as Sellars insists in Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind, it
simply cannot be the case that a cognitive state is both epistemically
independent and epistemically efficacious. For epistemic efficacy can
only be gained through holding some rational justification relations
with other cognitive states: nothing can justify a belief except another
justified belief, and so on. Yet the apprehension of the given is not,
in itself, a cognitive state. It is a fact, and although it can be the truth
bearer of the corresponding perceptual belief, it is clearly not some-
thing that is itself liable to be true or false. It simply exists, and as such
it may cause a belief, but no more than a chair or a tree is it a reason
to acquire, entertain, or revise one. Hence, no matter how it is viewed
(as a particular sense impression or as a fact), the given is epistemically
inert. To be efficacious, it should be epistemically dependent, that is
to say not merely given. Sellars does not mean that nothing is given:
to be sure, we do experience sensuous content and those conscious
perceptions are neither conceptual nor do they involve the actualiza-
tion of our conceptual capacities. But they are not intentional (they do
not represent anything) and have no epistemic authority whatsoever.
Henceforth, as basic and irresistible as they seem to be, our perceptual
beliefs remain open to revision, as the cases of illusion or hallucination
demonstrate.
Of course, Sellars’ refutation rests on a strong commitment to episte-
mological internalism and normativism:
Notes
1. His 1910 Harvard Ph.D. dissertation addressed ‘The Place of Intuition in
Knowledge’. On the relation between Lewis and Kant, see Gowans (1989).
2. A surprisingly large amount of works were devoted to the issue of the given in
the first half of the 20th century, most of it being published in The Journal of
Philosophy.
3. See the influential work of John McDowell (1994).
4. Russell (1912, p. 10).
5. On the phenomenal character of perceptual presence, see Crane (2014, section
2.1.2).
Perception and Its Givenness 175
6. In this respect, I do not agree with Crane (2014, section 3.3.1). The Müller-
Lyer case illustrates the fact that ‘one can have a perceptual illusion that
things are a certain way even when one knows they are not’. But if, as
Crane maintains, ‘in the situation as described, one does not believe, in any
sense, that the lines are different lengths’, where does our feeling of cogni-
tive perplexity or dissonance come from? Looking at the two shafts, we see
them as of a different length and are at least disposed to believe that they
are so. Admittedly, it would not be accurate to say that we are entertaining
explicitly contradictory beliefs here. However, we are experiencing at least
a cognitive conflict, due to a clear discrepancy between what we believe or
know (conceive as true), and what we are disposed to believe given what we
perceive. We might conclude that we do not perceive what we think we ought
to perceive, given the truth as we know it. But the illusion is persistent and
obviously weighs on our beliefs system, or at least on the set of our reasons
to believe. On the persistence of illusion and its epistemological significance,
see Fodor (1984/1990).
7. See Crane (2006, pp. 141ff.) on the awareness of one’s own experiential qual-
ities versus the idea of the transparency of experience.
8. Sellars insists that his target in Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind (first
edition 1956) is the ‘entire framework of givenness’ (2000, p. 205), of which
sense data are just one item.
9. On this point, Price and Lewis disagree: whereas Price accepts the possibility
of non-conceptual knowledge (knowledge by acquaintance), Lewis (1956,
p. 37) states firmly that there is no knowledge merely by direct awareness.
For him the given-in-itself is not cognitive.
10. ‘While we can thus isolate the element of the given by these criteria of its
inalterability and its character as sensuous feel or quality, we cannot describe
any particular given as such, because in describing it, in whatever fashion, we
qualify it by bringing it under some category or other, select from it, empha-
size aspects of it, and relate it in particular and avoidable ways. […] So that in
a sense the given is ineffable, always.’ (Lewis, 1956, pp. 52f.)
11. ‘In intellectual analysis, I do not do anything to the object before me. I find
relations within it. I discover that it possesses various characteristics – say
redness and roundness – and I apprehend certain differences between those
characteristics. But those relations and characteristics were there before I
discovered them. The only change that has occurred is a change in myself. I
was ignorant, and now, I know.’ (Price, 1950, p. 15) In other words, if there
are real effects that the activity of mind may induce, they occur on the side
of the knower, rather than on the side of the object known. Accordingly, the
given-in-itself, though it is reached only by the means of abstraction, can
genuinely be an object of knowledge and description. McDowell’s argument
that the given is available to conceptual articulation, though not necessarily
always conceptualized, is likely a much more elaborated way of advocating
such a view, without falling prey to a thoroughly empirical theory of concepts,
as the one Price was advocating. His attempt seems clearly to restore percep-
tion’s transparency, which is threatened by the Kantian distinction between
passivity and spontaneity in the subject. Empirical experience is a genuine
openness to the world, because even though perception leads to intuitions,
176 Aude Bandini
in McDowell sense intuitions are not something alien to judgment: both are
conceptually articulated. See McDowell (2009).
12. I am indebted to Jérôme Dokic (2012, p. 490) for drawing my attention to
this interesting footnote from Pryor.
13. Not to mention Husserl, but a reflection on Husserl’s influence on the philos-
ophy of perception in analytical philosophy far exceeds the scope of this
chapter.
14. The case of touch might be an exception in this regard, at least in the experi-
ence of kinetic resistance. Still, givenness is clearly distinct from, say, softness
or warmth.
15. This is very close to some of Alva Noë’s views on perceptual presence. For
example, see Noë (2012).
16. Epistemic efficaciousness and epistemic independence are not Sellars’ own
terms. This useful terminological distinction was introduced in the literature
on Sellars by deVries and Triplett (2000) in their particularly valuable study
guide of Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind.
17. Note that, to some extent, Sellars himself resorts to a qualified version of
externalism and naturalism in order to account for the process of conceptual
change, especially with his view of truth-picturing. On the subtle articulation
of normativism and naturalism in Sellars, see O’Shea (2007, pp. 143–90).
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Perception and Its Givenness 177