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    The difference between perception and mere alteration lie... — Carmelics
    Home/Perception
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    Supports→When animals receive perceptual forms, perception results; when non-living entities are affected by seemingly the same forms, only non-perceptual alteration occurs.

    The difference between perception and mere alteration lies in the nature of the patient receiving the form

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    Animals, unlike non-living entities such as tofu, have the suitable character to...When animals receive perceptual forms, perception results; when non-living entit...

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    SEP: aristotle-psychology
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    This much, however, does not explain how perception occurs. Aristotle claims that perception is best understood on the model of hylomorphic change generally: just as a house changes from blue to white when acted upon by the agency of a painter applying paint, so “perception comes about with <an organ’s> being changed and affected … for it seems to be a kind of alteration” (De Anima ii 5, 416b33–34). So in line with his general account of alteration, Aristotle treats perception as a case of

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