Seeing with the hands : blindness, vision, and touch after Descartes

Blind Touch Visual perception Blindness Philosophy, Medical Touch Perception Visually Impaired Persons History
Edinburgh University Press
2016
EISBN 9781474405331
Introduction: on questioning blindess and what the blind 'see'.
'Seeing with the hands': Descartes, blindness, and vision.
'Suppose a man born blind...': cubes and spheres, hands and eyes.
Objects that 'touch'd his eyes': surgical experiments in the recovery of vision.
Voltaire, Buffon, and blindness in France.
The testimony of blind men: Diderot's Lettre.
Reading with the fingers: tactile signs and the possibilities for a language of touch.
Seeing with the tongue: sight through other means.
Blindness, empathy, and 'feeling seeing': literary accounts of blind experience.
"Through an unfolding historical, philosophical and literary narrative that includes Locke, Molyneux and Berkeley in Britain, and Diderot, Voltaire and Buffon in France, this book explores how the Molyneux Question and its aftermath has influenced attitudes towards blindness by the sighted, and sensory substitution technologies for the blind and vision impaired, to this day."
'Seeing with the hands': Descartes, blindness, and vision.
'Suppose a man born blind...': cubes and spheres, hands and eyes.
Objects that 'touch'd his eyes': surgical experiments in the recovery of vision.
Voltaire, Buffon, and blindness in France.
The testimony of blind men: Diderot's Lettre.
Reading with the fingers: tactile signs and the possibilities for a language of touch.
Seeing with the tongue: sight through other means.
Blindness, empathy, and 'feeling seeing': literary accounts of blind experience.
"Through an unfolding historical, philosophical and literary narrative that includes Locke, Molyneux and Berkeley in Britain, and Diderot, Voltaire and Buffon in France, this book explores how the Molyneux Question and its aftermath has influenced attitudes towards blindness by the sighted, and sensory substitution technologies for the blind and vision impaired, to this day."
