“There was no cognition he realized. There was only perception.”
Secret History (p. 350)
Short fiction, Vacuum Diagrams (1997)
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Stephen Baxter55
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Eliezer Yudkowsky (1979) American blogger, writer, and artificial intelligence researcher
How an Algorithm Feels from the Inside http://lesswrong.com/lw/no/how_an_algorithm_feels_from_inside/, (February 2008) <br class="br">Context: People cling to their intuitions, I think, not so much because they believe their cognitive algorithms are perfectly reliable, but because they can't see their intuitions as the way their cognitive algorithms happen to look from the inside. And so everything you try to say about how the native cognitive algorithm goes astray, ends up being contrasted to their direct perception of the Way Things Really Are—and discarded as obviously wrong.
Eric R. Kandel (1929) American neuropsychiatrist
The Age of Insight (2012)
Context: I outline in simple terms... our current understanding of the cognitive psychological and neurobiological basis of perception, memory, emotion, empathy, and creativity.... the principles of the viewer's response to art are applicable to all periods of painting.
Patañjali (-200–-150 BC) ancient Indian scholar(s) of grammar and linguistics, of yoga, of medical treatises
The Light of the Soul: Its Science and Effect : a paraphrase of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, with commentary by Alice A. Bailey, (1927)
Alice A. Bailey (1880–1949) esoteric, theosophist, writer
Source: The Light of the Soul: Its Science and Effect: a paraphrase of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, with commentary (1927)
Ulric Neisser (1928–2012) American psychologist
Source: Cognitive Psychology, 1967, p. 4
“There is no truth. There is only perception.”
Gustave Flaubert (1821–1880) French writer (1821–1880)
Quoted in The Letters of Gustave Flaubert, 1857-1880, ed. and trans. Francis Steegmuller (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1982), xii.
Correspondence
Variant: There is no 'true'. There are merely ways of perceiving truth.
“There is no reality, only perception.”
Phil McGraw (1950) American television host, psychologist, actor and film producer
Peter J. Carroll (1953) British occultist
Source: Liber Null & Psychonaut (1987), p. 28
Context: Man considers himself center of will and a center of perception. Will and perception are not separate but only appear so to the mind. The unity which appears to the mind to exert twin functions of will and perception is called Kia by magicians. Sometimes it is called the spirit, or soul, or life force, instead.