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Aesthesis and Perceptronium: On the Entanglement of Sensation, Cognition, and Matter
University of Minnesota Press, 2019 Paper: 978-1-5179-0660-3 | Cloth: 978-1-5179-0659-7 Library of Congress Classification BH39.W553 2019 Dewey Decimal Classification 111.85
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS
ABOUT THIS BOOK
A new speculative ontology of aesthetics
Aesthesis and Perceptronium negotiates between indiscriminately pluralist views that attribute mentation to all things and eliminative views that deny the existence of mentation even in humans. By recasting aesthetic questions within the framework of “epistemaesthetics,” which considers cognition and aesthetics as belonging to a single category that can neither be fully disentangled nor fully reduced to either of its terms, Wilson forges a theory of nonhuman experience that avoids this untenable dilemma. Through a novel consideration of the evolutionary origins of cognition and its extension in technological developments, the investigation culminates in a rigorous reevaluation of the status of matter, information, computation, causality, and time in terms of their logical and causal engagement with the activities of human and nonhuman agents. See other books on: Cognitive Science | Entanglement | Materialism | Sensation | Wilson, Alexander See other titles from University of Minnesota Press |
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