Everything about Percept totally explained
A
perception is a philosophical term which roughly means an individual's observation/perception of something external to one's self; more specifically, the resultant of perceiving. It is the representation of an external event that affected the
senses and which - by perceptual processing - caused the activation of a certain category in the
mind, for example, the percept. The term percept is typically used in contrast to the terms
distal stimulus (the external object) and
proximal stimulus (the physical stimulation pattern on the senses, for example, the pattern of light wavelength projected on the
retina off the distal stimulus).
This term is exceedingly important in the understanding and discussion of human perceptual processes and is functionally critical to the discussion of optical art and visual illusions. Particular examples of the criticality of the term include
optical illusions dependent upon the process of 'ambiguity' wherein one image can create two entirely separate and distinct percepts. This is commented upon by
Ludwig Wittgenstein in his
Philosophical Investigations (
1953), and
Rudolf Arnheim in
Art and Visual Perception (
1954). It is also a term used in
Rudolf Steiner's theory of knowledge, which treats the relation of percept and concept.
Marshall McLuhan declared that he was more interested in percepts than
concepts.
Percept is also a term used by
Bergson and
Deleuze to define perception gone independent from their authors. According to Deleuze,
science uses percepts, while art works with
affects and philosophy creates concepts.
The term percept is also gaining use in the information technology industry in how to price data transfer. For example, rather than charging an individual, who is remotely retrieving data from say a weather sensor or a GPS device, by the size of the data, a company would charge that individual by the percept. Here a percept would constitute a statistical data point, as a GPS location. Pricing per percept would mean that a customer or individual using that GPS device would actually be charged per unit of true economic value to him/her, a GPS location datapoint, rather than on the size of that datapoint in bits/bytes/kilobytes etc.
Etymology
Merriam Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary (1990) defines "percept" as follows:
» percept n. [back-formationfr.
perception] (1837): an impression of an object obtained by use of the senses: SENSE-DATUM.
A SENSE-DATUM in turn is defined as:
» sense-datum n. (1921): an immediate unanaylzable private object of sensation
In the first definition, the word "back-formation" means that the longer word "perception" was simply shortened to form "percept". A distinction between the two words isn't obvious. The first non-obsolete definition of
perception (for example #2 in the quote below) is:
» perception n. [Latin:past particlple of
percipere] (ca 1612) 2a. a result of perceiving : OBSERVATION b: a mental image : CONCEPT.
Alfred North Whitehead and
Bertrand Russell decline the use of the word "percept" in their lengthy discussion of "Truth and Falsehood" in
Principia Mathematica (1913, 1927). But observe, in the following, the subtle distinction between a "judgment of a relation" by a "percipient" (a relation of four terms) versus "the observation-as-relation" in relation to the percipient (a relation of two terms). They write:
» "The universe consists of objects having various qualities and standing in various relations. Some of the objects which occur in the universe are complex. When an object is complex it consists of interrelated parts. Let us consider a complex object composed of two parts a and b standing to each other in relation R. The complex object "a-in-the-relation-R-to-b" may be capable of being perceived . . . we then
judge that a and b stand in the relation R. Such a judgment, being derived from perception by mere attention, may be called a "judgment of perception". This judgement of perception, considered as an actual occurrence, is a relation of four terms, namely and b and R and the percipient. The perception, on the contrary, is a relation of two terms, namely "a-in-the relation-R-to-b," and the percipient. Since an object of perception can't be nothing, we can't perceive "a-in-the-relation-R-to-b" unless a is in the rleation R to b. Hence a judgment of perception, according to the above definition, must be true." (p. 43, Cambridge University Press, 1962)
They allow for error of judgment (for example What I thought I saw (I judged to be) was a bird but when it alighted I saw it was really a bat), but in fact the percept is an unassailable truth -- a sense datum in the definition above -- an unassailable private object of sensation. A falsehood, then, must come from of the failure of the second sort of relation (the percipient's perception of her percept), for example that the relation "a-in-the-relation-R-to-b" and "the percipient" doesn't hold. Thus, although I can assert, truly, that I saw a "bird" (my private sense-datum, my unassailable percept), in fact (as determined by further percept and perception) the flying shape "a-in-the-relation-R-to-b" was a bat.
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