
Published online:
21 September 2017
Published in print:
01 April 2016
Online ISBN:
9781474418614
Print ISBN:
9781474405317
Contents
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Blindness in the age of Enlightenment Blindness in the age of Enlightenment
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‘Hypothetical’ blindness ‘Hypothetical’ blindness
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‘Actual’ blindness: on blindness, ‘blindness’, and vision impairment ‘Actual’ blindness: on blindness, ‘blindness’, and vision impairment
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Overview of the chapters Overview of the chapters
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Chapter
Introduction On Questioning Blindness and What the Blind ‘See’
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Pages
1–20
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Published:April 2016
Cite
Paterson, Mark, 'On Questioning Blindness and What the Blind ‘See’', Seeing with the Hands: Blindness, Vision and Touch After Descartes (Edinburgh , 2016; online edn, Edinburgh Scholarship Online, 21 Sept. 2017), https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474405317.003.0001, accessed 5 May 2025.
Abstract
Introducing three types of ‘blindness’. Firstly, its conception as a philosophical problem in the Enlightenment. This hinges on the so-called Molyneux Question posed by Molyneux to John Locke. Therefore, the second form of blindness is hypothetical. In its original form, the Molyneux Question explicitly instantiates the Foucauldian mythical experience of the ‘man born blind restored to light’. Thirdly, ‘actual’ blindness, which examines definitions of blindness as opposed to vision impairment.
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