Words and Images: An Essay on the Origin of Ideas by Christopher Gauker

Words and Images: An Essay on the Origin of Ideas by Christopher Gauker

Author:Christopher Gauker
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2014-05-23T16:00:00+00:00


2. Feats of imagination

Suppose I need to replace a rubber washer in the hot water valve in my bathroom sink. Here is what I have to do. First, I unscrew the cap labeled “H” on the handle. Then I stick a screwdriver into the cylinder inside the handle and unscrew the screw at the bottom. Then I lift the handle out of its seat. Then, using my hand, I unscrew the escutcheon cap (the chrome “skirt” surrounding the stem). Using a wrench, I then unscrew the ring that holds down the stem and lift it off. Then I pull the stem out. At the bottom of the stem is a screw holding in the old washer. I unscrew that screw using a small wrench. Then I pry out the old washer with a knife, replace it with the new washer, and, finally, reverse all of the above operations.

What I have just described is the procedure by which I replace a washer. In order to generate the description, I did not actually replace any washers. (p.150) I merely imagined the process. I found words to describe what I imagined, including some words (“escutcheon cap”) that are recent additions to my vocabulary. But I could just as well, it seems to me, have imagined the operation without using any words. Likewise, if I were to actually perform the operation, I would be guided by my imagination. At each stage, I would picture the next step of the operation. Since I do have concepts that apply to some of the parts (handle, stem, escutcheon cap), I can apply concepts to the parts as I think myself through the process. The use of these concepts is entirely incidental, important only when I look for words to describe the process to others. In sum, I have an imaginative understanding of how things go together.

Suppose I am kneeling down, looking at a box turtle. I am considering whether I might poke it with my finger. I think I know what will happen next if I do so. The turtle will withdraw its head and limbs into its shell. Maybe I have learned a rule: “If you poke a turtle with your finger, it will withdraw its head and limbs into its shell.” But I do not think I need to know any such rule, written out in my mind in words or in concepts. It is, so to speak, my imagination that forms my expectations. I can imagine many different things that could happen when I poke the turtle. It could turn to leave. It could try to bite me. It could bark like a dog or fly away like a bird. It could melt, or turn into a loaf of bread. Of all the things that I can imagine happening, the thing that is most like what has happened in the past when I have poked a turtle with my finger is its withdrawing its head and limbs into its shell. For just that reason,



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.