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Home
Authors
James J. Gibson
American
Psychologist
About the author
A mechanical encounter or other energy-exchange may cause tissue damage.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#May
#Cause
#Energy
Hence it is that the shape of something is especially meaningful.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
I also assume that they are not simply the physical properties of things as now conceived by physical science. Instead, they are ecological, in the sense that they are properties of the environment relative to an animal.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Now
#Science
#Sense
#Environment
The abstract analysis of the world by mathematics and physics rests on the concepts of space and time.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Time
#World
#Space
#Physics
#Mathematics
What a thing is and what it means are not separate, the former being physical and the latter mental as we are accustomed to believe.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Being
The perception of what a thing is and the perception of what it means are not separate, either.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Perception
There has been a great gulf in psychological thought between the perception of space and objects on one hand and the perception of meaning on the other.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Thought
#Perception
#Meaning
#Space
The meaning or value of a thing consists of what it affords.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Value
#Meaning
The human young must learn to perceive these affordances, in some degree at least, but the young of some animals do not have time to learn the ones that are crucial for survival.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Time
#Survival
#Animals
Psychology is still trying to explain the perception of the position of an object in space, along with its shape, size, and so on, and to understand the sensations of color.
James J. Gibson,
American
Psychologist
#Trying
#Sensations
#Perception
#Space
#Psychology