Direct Perception and Whiteheadian Natural Philosophy
Abstract
In this theoretical paper, our primary focus is on Alfred North Whitehead’s natural philosophy. While the term ‘natural philosophy’ may be misleading, it is nothing but general natural science ‘before it is convenient to split it up into various [special] branches’ of physics, biology, and psychology. In the paper’s first section, we warrant and contextualize such a study as contributing to the spirit of thinking together the physical, biological, and psychological science. In the second section, we look at Whitehead’s general natural science, partly expressible as ‘mathematical theory of a hypothetical substructure of the universe.’ Specifically, we focus on two such theories, mechanistic materialism and Whitehead’s ether of events, state their formal properties in intuitive terms, and draw out the corresponding implications it has for physics (Space, Time, Mass, Charge) and psychology (Sense Objects, Perceptual Objects). We concretize the dispersed insights on perceptual psychology in this section in a subsequent section - Direct Perception - and highlight the senses in which perception might be conceptualized as direct. Two are of notable importance, the first of which concerns the rejection of ‘Bifurcation of Nature,’ and the second with acceptance of the ‘Solidarity Thesis.’ We end with a brief conclusion.