Phenomenology of Perception
Phenomenology of Perception
Phenomenology of Perception
Maurice Merleau-Ponty
I. Sensation
Perception is not purely sensation, nor is it purely interpretation.
Consciousness is a process that includes sensing as well as reasoning.
Experience may be reflective or unreflective.
Unreflective experience may be known by subsequent reflection.
Reflection may be aware of itself as an experience.
Reflection may also be a way to understand and to structure experience.
II. Space
Space may be defined as a form of external experience, rather than as a physical setting in
which external objects are arranged.
The relationships between objects in space are revealed by the experience of the perceiving
subject. A perceptual field is a field in which perceptions are present in time and space.
Space is modified and restructured by time.
II. Temporality
Reflection may be focused successively on different parts of a perceptual field.
According to Merleau-Ponty, perceptual objects have an inner horizon in consciousness and an
outer horizon in the external world.
The object-horizon structure enables the individual to distinguish perceptual objects from each
other. All objects reflect each other in time and space.
III. Freedom
Merleau-Ponty concludes by defining freedom as a mode of consciousness in which personal
actions and commitments can be chosen within a situation or field of possibility.
Freedom is always within a given field of possibility.
Freedom is always present in a situation, unless we lose our belonging to the situation.
Freedom is a mode of being-in-the-world which enables us to transcend ourselves.