Are theories of perception necessary?
Representational theories of perception postulate an isolated and autonomous “subject” set apart from its real environment, and then go on to invoke processes of mental representation, construction, or hypothesizing to explain how perception can nevertheless take place. Although James Gibson’s most conspicuous contribution has been to challenge representational theory, his ultimate concern was the cognitivism which now prevails in psychology. He was convinced that the so- called cognitive revolution merely perpetuates, and even promotes, many of psychology’s oldest mistakes.