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Philosophical Perspectives, 21, Philosophy of Mind, 2007

WHAT CHANGE BLINDNESS TEACHES ABOUT CONSCIOUSNESS

Fred Dretske Duke University

Change blindness is often described as a failure of subjects with normal vision to see the visible objects and/or properties whose presence or absence constitutes a difference (change) in sequentially observed scenes. The evidence used to support this charge of blindness is the failure of subjects to notice or detect the difference these objects and properties make. If, though, one doesnt have to notice a difference in order to be conscious of the objects and properties making up that difference, the striking deficits revealed by change blindness tell one absolutely nothing about what a person is conscious of. They reveal nothing about perceptual experience. They reveal something, perhaps, about what a person knows or doesnt know, what she thinks or doesnt think, but nothing about what she sees or fails to see. This critical assumptionthat noticing or detecting differences is necessary for awareness of the things constituting the differenceis an assumption that many participants in this research would happily admit to making. More often than not it is simply taken for granted. For many psychologists and philosophers, conscious perception of objects just is perception of them (usually understood as the receipt of information about them) with an associated awareness that one perceives them. In philosophy the idea is expressed by HOT (higher-orderthought), a theory of consciousness according to which conscious experience is simply experience one knows and, therefore, thinks one is having.1 In psychology the assumption is called the subjective test for awareness, a widely accepted operational criterion that identifies conscious experience with experience the subject knows she is having and is, therefore, able to report having.2 Despite its widespread acceptance, though, this assumption is false. It is false in a way that seriously distorts the character of perceptual experience. It represents conscious experience as informationally more impoverishedand, therefore, less rich and texturedthan it actually is. Ridding oneself of this assumption, then, is an important step in getting a clearer, a more realistic, account of perceptual experience.

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1. Seeing and Noticing


The first lesson of change blindness is that one can be conscious of elements constituting a visible difference without ever realizing there is such a difference. Not seeing the differencethat there is a differenceis consistent with seeing whatever it is that makes that difference. Change blindness exhibits a failure to notice (and, hence, know) not a failure to see. Lets begin with an ordinary example, the sort of case familiar from the change blindness literature. Sarah looks at seven people gathered around a table. Each person is clearly visible. Sarah looks for a few seconds, runs her eye, as we say, over and, therefore, foveates3 each person at the table, but she pays no particular attention to any of them. She then looks away. While looking away, an additional personcall him Samjoins the group. Sam is clearly visible. There are now eight visible people. When Sarah looks back, she doesnt notice the difference. Having no reason to suspect a change has occurred, she thinks she is looking at the same group of people. When asked whether she sees a difference, Sarah says, No. This is an example of what psychologists call change blindnessa clearly visible difference that Sarah does not see. At least she doesnt believe she sees it. She says she doesnt see it. She believes she sees the same people she saw the first time. The question is whether this is a genuine case of blindness. Did Sarah actually see Sam the second time without noticing him? If so, she was not aware of the fact that she was aware of something different, but that, remember, is not the question. The question we are now asking is not whether Sarah thinks she is aware of something different, but whether she is, in fact, aware of something different. We are not interested in what Sarah knows. We are interested in what Sarah sees. We want to know what, if anything, she is blind to, not what, if anything, she is ignorant of. Given the situation as Ive described it, it seems entirely reasonable to say that Sarah not only saw Sam the second time, but that her experience of him was of the same kind, a fully conscious experience, as was her experience of the other seven people. This is what I have elsewhere called object-awareness (of Sam, a person who constitutes a visible difference) without fact-awareness that there is a difference.4 Sarahs failure to see the difference (that there is a change) in the group of people around the table is perfectly consistent with her seeing Sam in a fully conscious way. If there is any doubt about this, imagine that in the interval between her first and second observation Sarah, for whatever reason, is primed to look for people in blue shirts. Sam is the only one wearing a blue shirt. Sarah notices him during her second observation. Nonetheless, she still doesnt realize that he wasnt there the first time. She thinks he was there the first time, but that she (not looking for blue shirts then) didnt notice him. So on the assumption that one sees, is fully conscious of, things one notices or attends to, Sarah, on her second observation, is fully conscious of, Sam, the person who makes up

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a difference, while still failing to realize that there is (or that he constitutes) a difference in the group of people she saw on the two occasions. This, it seems to me, demonstrates quite conclusively the irrelevance of change blindness to conscious perception of the objects (and properties) constituting the difference. Change blindness is a cognitive, not a visual, impairment. It is more appropriately described as change ignorance.5 One can be blind to visible differences and still see everything (i.e., every object and/or property) that people who notice the difference see.6 It would, after all, be exceedingly strange if Sarah, on her second observation, were only aware of the same seven people she saw the first time. Why does she only fail to see, why is she only blind to, Sam? Why not one or more of the other seven people? Or, despite Sarahs protests (she thinks she saw, maybe, a half dozen people), isnt she aware of anyone at the table? If Sarah is, as she says, aware of some people around the table, does her visual system somehow know that Sam is a new, an additional, a different member of the group and, as a result, create a localized blindnessa scotomathat prevents her perception of just him? That sounds absurd. It seems more plausible to suppose that on the second viewing Sarah saw Sam in the same way she saw every other person around the table, the same way she saw all seven people the first timeviz., consciously. Her visual experience the second time was different from what it was the first time, and the experience, on both occasions, was conscious. Sarah simply fails to notice, fails to detect (therefore, remains ignorant of and, hence, fails to report on) a difference that she consciously experiences. One can be conscious of objects that constitute a visible difference and not be conscious of the fact that one is conscious of them. This is why we cannot use change blindness to conclude anything about what subjects are conscious ofespecially not when dealing with complex, multi-element stimuli. You are looking for a friend in a crowded marketplace. You cant find him. Later, after youve found him, he tells you he was standing directly in front of the fruit stand you looked at several times. You, in effect, plead blindness: I didnt see you. Wrong! You probably did see him. You just didnt recognize him. He was, after all, standing in your line of sight only a few yards away in broad daylight. You certainly didnt see through him. You didnt, for instance, see the apples on the stand directly behind him. The reason you didnt see the apples is because he was in front of them, blocking your view of them. So you must have seen him. The reason you didnt recognize him is that you mistakenly thought he wore his red sweater today so you, without pausing to study faces, scanned by the blues, browns and grays you saw in the crowd. Im not arguing that a person is always conscious of all visible elements in a complex display. Only that one can be, and often is, aware of more than one realizes. If Sarah looks at seven hundred people in a room, seven thousand in a parade, or seventy thousand in a soccer stadium, all clearly visible from where

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she is sitting, does she see them all? I dont know. She probably doesnt see all of them. She certainly sees a lot of them. The subjective impression of having seen hundreds, even thousands, of distinct elements in such conditions (I readily concede to Dan Dennett 1991) may be an illusion. It may be an illusion. Whether it is an illusion seems to me to be an empirical matter (I return to this point in 3). It depends on how much and what kind of information one actually gets about these individual objects, and it is important to remember here that not much information about an object is needed to see it. Information about color isnt necessary or we wouldnt be able to see things at dusk, in dimly lit rooms, or in peripheral vision. Information about shape isnt necessary. Things look pretty much the same shape at 600 yards or (in the case of stars) 1,000 light years. That doesnt prevent their being seen. If you get enough informationand this isnt muchfrom x to enable you to wonder of or about x What is that?, you perceive x with awareness. It is conscious perception. A question about whether Sarah is conscious of Sam, then, could be put this way: when Sarah sees the group the second time, could she (not did she, but could she) have wondered Who is that? about Sam? She can wonder this without ever realizing he wasnt there the first time. If this is the correct way to interpret the results of change blindnessat least some cases of change blindnessthen the first lesson to be learned from change blindness is that noticing or detecting x is not necessary for being conscious of x. You can be conscious of x and not think you are. You can be conscious of things that make a difference and think you are not. This, though, leaves us with a troubling question. If you dont have to know you are aware of something to be aware of it, if you dont have to notice or detect it to be conscious of it, what, then, makes perception conscious? If Sarah isnt the authority on whom or what she is conscious of, who is? If it isnt her thinking she sees him that makes her perception of Sam conscious, what does? This brings us to a second lesson of change blindness.

2. Seeing and Knowing


Though one can see an object without realizing it, without knowing anything about it (this is the first lesson), awareness of it is constituted by an experience that enables on to have direct knowledge of it. Think, once again, about Sarahs second observation. Although no one captures Sarahs attention, any member of this group, including Sam, could attract her attention. I couldnt attract her attention, at least not while she is looking at the group around the table, because I am standing behind her. She cant see me. The picture on the wall behind Sam could not attract her attention because she doesnt see it; Sam is in front of it. But Sam, if he had been wearing a clown costume, if he had been standing on his head, or if he had been stark naked, would have been noticed. He would have attracted her attention. The

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same is true of the other seven people. The fact that Sarah would have noticed him if he had been naked or standing on his head suggests7 that Sarah is getting sensory information about Samthe information that he has clothes on and is standing upright. She gets the same information about every member of the group. She didnt, perhaps, pay enough attention to tell you what anyone was wearing, but that everyone was wearing something or other was clear enough. Sarah, therefore, can tell you something about Samnot, it is true, about Sam by name (she doesnt know who Sam is), not, it is true, about Sam as the new or a different member of the group (this is the fact she is blind toi.e., ignorant of), but, nonetheless, about Sam as one of the people she saw around that table. We can even imagine her asked to testify about Sams behavior at a wild party. She was an eyewitness. Her testimony goes as follows: if, as you tell me, Sam was standing at that table the second time I looked, and if, as you assure me, no one was blocking my view of him, I can assure you he was not naked. None of them were. I could see that much. Under normal circumstances and with respect to objects we are attentive to, visual experience supports, it grounds, it justifies, a host of beliefs we have about the things we see. It gives us knowledge of them. The man Im talking to, Sam, is standing upright. He is not standing on his head. How do I know this? I can see that it is so. What makes my experience of the person conscious is that information embodied in this experience is the basis, the justification, for my current conscious and expressible beliefs about the person. But experiences can carry such information without generating any beliefs at the time they occur. This is what happens in Sarahs case. At the time Sarah sees Sam, she doesnt think to herself: that guy is wearing clothes, he is standing upright, he isnt dressed like a clown. She doesnt think anything at all about Sam. She doesnt even notice him. Yet she has, in her experience of him, a great deal of information about him, information she can later exploit in telling us something about the men she saw around the table. Her experience of Sam is conscious for the same reason my experience of Sam is conscious: the experience (in my case) justifies and (in Sarahs case) it is capable of justifying a conscious judgment about the objects seen. The only difference between Sarah and me is that Sarahs judgments were deferred. A judgment only occurred later, when she was asked about the people around the table. My judgments, on the other hand, were cotemporaneous with the experience on which they were based. Both experiences carried the information that made this knowledge possible. Perceptual knowledge of the world is sometimes of this delayed sort, the sort that Sarah has of Sam when she later thinks about the people she saw earlier. This is the kind of perceptual knowledge I might have (or acquire) when someone asks me about whether there were any giraffes in my bedroom this morning. I know there werent because I could see there werent. I didnt have giraffe thoughts at the time, of course, but now that I think about it, my current beliefs about my room qualify as perceptual knowledge on the basis of the experience I had this morning.

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This sort of delayed perceptual knowledge is such a pervasive phenomenon that we often, charitably, give ourselves knowledge at the time at which the experience occurred despite the absence (at the time) of any belief or judgment. I knew this morning that there werent any giraffes in my room despite not thinking about it until now. And one can hear Sarah insisting that she knew, at the time she saw them, that none of the people around that table were wearing clown suits. She didnt think about it until now, it is true, but she has, from her experience of the group, all she needed to know. She didnt, she will insist, just find this out. She knew it all along despite not thinking about it until asked. This suggests an epistemic test for awareness, a knowledge test for what a subject is conscious of. The rough idea (refinements in a moment) is that if you can see (and thereby know) that x is F for some value of F, you must be aware of x. You cant know, by seeing, that x is F without being conscious of x. Even if Sarah didnt notice Sam, even if she paid no attention to him, if she could see that he was (or wasnt) F for some value of F, then she must have seen him. So if Sarah now knowsor could knowbased on her past visual experience of the group, that none of the people at that table were naked,8 then since Sam was one of the people at that table, Sarah knows things about Sam. So she must have seen him. The fact that she didnt, at the time, see that this was so (she had no thoughts at all about this subject) is irrelevant. The fact that, without any change in her experience, she could have known it and the fact that now a judgment based on that experience qualifies as knowledge shows that her conscious experience carried this kind of information about Sam. Two qualifications are important. (1) You can, of course, see that x is Fthat Sam has clothes on, for instancenot by the way x (Sam) looks, but by the way something else looks. Seeing a photograph of x, the indications of an appropriate measuring instrument, or a prearranged signal from a knowledgeable accomplice will do. So it must be understood in this test that the perceptual knowledge of x must be (what I will call) direct. The knowledge of x, that it is F, must be the result of the way x itself looks, not some information-carrying intermediary. (2) The perceptual knowledge in question must be of xs possession of some property or feature that does not affect visibility. We do not want to infer, for instance, that S sees (from ten yards away) a flea on Fido just because S can tell (see), from the general appearance of things, that none of the fleas on Fido are the size of a basketball. Size affects visibility. In these conditions and at this distance you can see things the size of a basketball but not things the size of a flea. So the fact that you can see (hence, know) that nothing on Fido is the size of a basketball, does not mean you can see x just because x is a flea on Fido. You can, perhaps, know (by vision) things about the fleas on Fido (that none of them are the size of a basketball), but from this it does not follow that you see the fleas on Fido. Color, shape, orientation, and dress, however, are not like that. These properties affect an objects noticeability (how much attention they attract), but not its visibility. Being naked in a crowd of clothed people (or, for that matter, being clothed in a crowd of naked people) affects how much attention you will attract, how easily

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you will be noticed, but it does not make you (as opposed to the parts of your body) visible. A red square in a crowd of green squares will be the one you notice first. It will stand out in a very conspicuous way. But its color doesnt make it visible. The green squares are just as visible. This is why I can prevent you from noticing (and, therefore, detecting or finding me) by wearing camouflage, but camouflage doesnt make me invisible.9 So, given these qualifications, the suggested epistemic test for awareness is this: S is consciously aware of x if and only if there are Fs (that do not affect xs visibility) that S can directly see (hence, know) that x possesses. You are conscious of x if your experience gives you (or, without change in the experience, could give you) direct knowledge of x where the direct means that the knowledge is the result of the way x itself (and not, say, a photograph or a measuring instrument) looks. It is important to understand that this test is not a simple informational test. It is not just information about x that is critical for awareness of x since one can get information about x without ever being conscious of x. It is, rather, the epistemological role of this information, its role in grounding a conscious judgment (belief) that is important. Remove this epistemic dimension, as you do, for example, in the case of perception of an object without awareness of it (e.g., blindsight), and what remains may (given a liberal enough interpretation of what perception is) qualify as perception of that object, but it will not be conscious perception. A person who is not conscious of Sam might receive visually transmitted information about Sam. The information may even causally influence the judgments the person makes about Sam. Facts about Sam may, in this way, play a part in the explanation, the reasons why, the person says and does what she does (e.g., gets so many correct answers in a forced-choice situation). But without consciousness these facts about Sam will not be a subjects reason, her justification, for whatever judgments she makes about Sam. She will not be able to see (and in that way know) that Sam is standing upright. Reactions to Sam, if they occur at all, will not add up to knowledge. They will be guesses correct guesses, perhaps, if they are reliably caused by information being received about Sambut guesses nonetheless.10 Sarahs judgments about Sam, however, are not guesses. She knows he wasnt standing on his head. No guessing about it. She knows it because she could see he wasnt. That is what conscious perception of Sam provides.

3. Operational Criteria for Consciousness


I expect to be told that if this is what change blindness teaches about consciousness, change blindness doesnt teach us anything very useful. It certainly doesnt give us a way of telling whether Sarah was aware of Sam. We are told that Sarah is aware of Sam if she knows (or could know) things about Sam by the way he looks. But how do we tell whether Sarah knows things about Sam? How do we tell whether Sam is one of the people she sees to be standing upright?

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Sarah would believe, at least she would say, exactly the same thingthat all the people at the table are standing uprightif, because of localized blindness (or because someone was standing in front of Sam), she wasnt aware of Sam. So even if Sarah knows something about Sam, she doesnt know she does. It is as if she didnt. It is as if Sam wasnt even there. So, from an operational standpoint, from the standpoint of finding out whether Sarah was aware of Sam, it is of no help to be told that Sarah is aware of Sam if she knows, by seeing, that assorted things are true of him. Not if we cant tell whether she knows things about Sam. This is a fair comment and it raises a genuine issue that I want to confront in this final section. As long as there is no way of telling whether Sarah is aware of Sam, no behavioral test or criterion for showing that she is conscious of him, there will remain a suspicion that such questions are really bogus. What is the scientific point, the purpose, in worrying about whether Sarah is conscious of Sam if such awareness need make absolutely no difference to Sarahs reactions to or dispositions toward Sam? One doesnt have to be logical positivist to want facts about a persons conscious experience to give rise to something observable (to others). Without that, it seems, there cannot be a science of consciousness. I think what we have already learned about conscious experience, especially the idea of it as an epistemologically enabling condition, can help us here. To illustrate the way it helps, I use a more dramatic example of change blindness than Sarahs perception of Sam. I use a wall containing several hundred bricks as an example of a multi-element stimulus. The question I ask is whether normal subjects during brief observations (2 or 3 seconds), despite an inability to see differences, are nonetheless aware of the bricks that constitute the difference and, if they are, how this might be demonstrated. The answer I give and hope to illustrate by use of the epistemological test for awareness is the same as I reached in the case of Sarah: namely, that many, perhaps most, subjects, despite a failure to see differences, are nonetheless aware of all the bricks in the wall and, in particular, the brick(s) that make the difference. They know, or their experience of the wall enables them to know, something about every brick. Look, then, at Figure 1, a brick wall with a few bricks missing. When you look again (Figure 2) the wall has changed. One of the missing bricks has been replaced. Do you see a difference? Probably not. Seeing a difference in the number of bricks is seeing that there is a difference, and I assume most of you didnt see this fact. We are not now interested, though, in what facts you saw. We are interested in what bricks you saw. Did any of you see, were any of you conscious of, Sam, (identified in Figure 3) the added brick in Figure 2? Did Sam make a difference in your conscious experience of the wall? Was your conscious experience of the wall different when you looked at Figure 2? Since you didnt see the difference between Figures 1 and 2, I dont expect you to know the answer to this question. But (for those of you with normal vision) I do.

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Figure 1. A brick wall (with some missing bricks)

Look at Figure 4. This is how the wall would have looked to you if Sam had been black instead of grey. Look at Figure 5: that is how the wall would have looked to you if Sam had been tilted instead of horizontal. You know the wall didnt look these ways when you saw it the second time. You would have noticed it if it had. You would have spotted Sam immediately. He would have popped out. But you didnt notice Sam. So he wasnt either black or tilted. Thinking back on your experience of Figure 2, you know that none of the bricks in the wall were black or tilted. Since Sam was one of the bricks in the wall, you know that Sam was neither black nor tilted. So, according to our proposed test for awareness which tells us that you are aware of an object if your experience enables you to know things about it by the way it looks, if you can (directly) see that it is F for some value of F (that does not affect its visibility), you were conscious not only of Sam but of every brick in the wall. When you viewed Figure 2 your experience of it was rich enough in information to give you knowledge of each brick in the wallthat it was neither black nor tilted.11 Of course you didnt knowand perhaps you are still not convincedthat you had this perceptual knowledge of Sam during your second observation

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Figure 2. The same brick wall (with one missing brick replaced)

(Figure 2). If you in fact came to know this of Sam, and this knowledge was based on the way Sam looked to you, then you may be ready to concede: you were aware of Sam. But you may not yet be convinced that you came to know this of Sam in particular. Maybe, you will say, you came to know this of some bricks, and came to know it by the way these bricks looked, but how can you be sure you came to know this of Samnot to mention each and every brick? If you cant be sure of this, then, even if you accept the epistemological test for awareness, you cant be sure you were conscious of Sam. I understand and sympathize with such agnosticism. Nonetheless, Figures 4 and 5 are meant to convince you that during the second observation your experience of the bricks was such that you could know (see) that Sam was neither black nor tilted. You knew this, I claim, because you knew that none of the bricks in that wall were black or tilted,12 and since Sam was one of those bricks, you knew this of Sam. It was, in part, the way Sam looked to you that told you that none of the bricks were black or tilted. If some other object had occluded Sam, if, therefore, Sam did not look some way to you, you would be unable to tell whether none of the bricks were black or tilted. So it is the way Sam

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Figure 3. The added brick (SAM) identified

looks that is essential for your knowing what you do about the wall. Figures 4 and 5, I submit, show that this is a reasonable conclusion about the particular brick we are calling Sam. Since nothing, except location, distinguishes Sam from other bricks in the wall, it is a reasonable conclusion about every other brick in the wall. If there is doubt about this, it could be tested. We can show the wall, again and again, controlling as much as possible for time of observation and direction(s) of gaze in order to see whether you could tell whether any brick was black or tilted. If results are the sameif, after brief (a few seconds13 ) observations, you can tell whether any brick is black or tiltedwe can conclude that such brief observations give you knowledge (or, if not knowledge, then the kind of perceptual experience needed for knowledge) about each and every brick in the wall. Since it is the way individual bricks look that gives one this knowledge (cover any one of the bricks and you destroy a persons ability to tell whether any of the bricks are black or tilted), you saw them all. Let me, then, summarize, the argument that observers of normal vision most of them anywayare (in observations of a few seconds) aware of every

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Figure 4. How figure 2 would have looked if SAM had been black

brick in the wall despite not being able to see differences in the number of bricks they see. First Step: Observers of normal vision will see some bricks when looking at Figures 1 and 2. When you looked at the brick wall, you were conscious of individual bricks in the wall. You dont know how many you saw, and you dont know whether there were the same number of bricks in Figure 1 and Figure 2, but observers of normal vision will be quite sure they see individual bricks both times. Their experience of the wall is not, in other words, like seeing a flock of geese or a herd of cows at a great distance where the collection is seen (it looks like a spot in the distance) but individual members of the collection are not discriminated. I assume that normal observers experience of the wall in Figures 1 and 2 is not like that. They will not just see a brick wall in the sense of a collection (pile, heap) of bricks. They will see individual bricks in the wall. If I am wrong about this, if vision is such that one could not, at this distance and illumination, see individual bricks when looking at these figures, then it seems clear that such a person did not seetherefore, was not conscious ofSam in Figure 2. I mean to exclude from consideration such people. I do not consider them observers of normal vision.

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Figure 5. How figure 2 would have looked if SAM had been tilted

Second Step: In looking at Figure 2, you (those who saw individual bricks) could see (and, hence, could in this way know) that none of the bricks were black or tilted. Your conscious experience of the wall carried this kind of information about the bricks. At the time you saw them you acquired, or could have acquired, a piece of perceptual knowledgethat none of the bricks were either black or tilted. If you arent sure your conscious experience of the wall justifies such a knowledge claim (that it actually carried this information) and are, therefore, reluctant to say you knew (or could now know) that (in viewing Figure 2) none of the bricks were black or tilted, this could be tested. Does the collection of bricks you saw look different to you if any brick is black or tilted? Figures 4 and 5 are meant to convince you that the collection of bricks would have looked different if Sam was black or tilted. We would have to see if this is true of each of the other bricks. Perhaps, although you saw many bricks when looking at the wall, you didnt see brick #247. Something (a speck in your eye) obscured it. Or perhaps #247 was seen only peripherally (unlikely with the numerous saccades occurring in the few seconds you viewed Figure 2) and information about its color (black or grey) was lacking. If so, you didnt get the information that it was grey like

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the other bricks. Or perhaps #247 projected to the blindspot in your left eye and you (contrary to instructions) viewed Figure 2 with only your left eye for only 50 milliseconds (during which no eye movements occurred). So you didnt actually get information about #247. So whether or not your experience, during your observation of Figure 2, carried information about each and every brickthat it was neither black nor tiltedis an empirical matter. Maybe it did, maybe it didnt. I assume, however, that normal observers are observers who view these figures in accordance with instructions: for several seconds with both eyes at reasonably close range. The claim is that these people will know that none of the bricks were black or tilted. I assume this is most people. It is, furthermore, the way individual bricks look to normal observers that gives them this information. Cover or conceal one or more of the bricks and the kind of reliability we take to be characteristic of knowledge vanishes. One can no longer see whether none of the bricks are black or tilted. So normal observers have direct perceptual knowledge of each and every brick. Step 3: So normal observersthose who I describe in steps 1 and 2when looking at Figure 2 were conscious of all the bricks in the wall. This conclusion is reached by applying the proposed criterion of awareness: if you can see that x is neither black nor tilted, and this knowledge is direct (it is the way x looks that carries this information), you must be aware of x. The perceptual knowledge is grounded in a conscious experience of the objects one acquires knowledge about. That, I conclude, is what perceptual consciousness provides. It gives us knowledge of the world around us.

Notes

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2.

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4.

I am grateful for the buffeting this paper received at places I read early versions: Delaware, Istanbul (Bogozici University), Connecticut, the ASSC-10 meetings in Oxford, and Wayne State University. I would particularly like to thank Chris Boorse at Delaware and (at Connecticut) Gunnar Bjornsson (from Goteborg University), Paul Bloomfield, and Crawford Elder for saying things that prompted me to make changes. Rosenthal 1986, 1990, 1991 is an early and articulate exponent; also see Carruthers 1989, 2000; Dennett 1978; Lycan 1987, 1992; and Armstrong 1968. See Cheesman and Merikle 1984, 1986; Kanwisher 2001; Dehaene 2001; Dienes and Perner 1996; Merikle, Smilek, and Eastwood 2001; Underwood 1996; Potter 1999; Dixon 1981. To foveate an object is to direct the eyes so that light from the object is directed onto the fovea, an area about 1 mm square on the retina densely packed with photoreceptor cells. Vision is most acute when the image of an object falls on this part of the retina. Dretske (1999). This is a distinction I earlier described (in Dretske 1969) as nonepistemic vs. epistemic perception.

What Change Blindness Teaches / 229 5. Wolfe (1999) describes change blindness not as a form of blindness, but as a form of amnesia. Subjects perceive things, they just dont remember well enough to report the perceived differences. It should go without saying that I have no objection to an interpretation of change blindness as a cognitive phenomenon, a failure to know, notice, remember, understand or realize. Often an investigators interpretation of the experiments is clouded by use of words like detect to describe what subjects fail to do when confronted with differences. Is a subjects failure to detect a change a failure to see it or just a failure to notice it (i.e., to know that it is occurring)? If the latter is what is meant, why call it blindness? 6. I assume here that factsincluding the fact that there is a differenceare neither visible nor invisible. They certainly dont emit or reflect light. 7. It suggests this, but it doesnt demonstrate it. The fact that you would notice x, an object in peripheral vision, if it moved, for instance, doesnt show that you saw x when it wasnt moving. Maybe its movement causes you to redirect your gaze so that you now see it when you didnt see it before. I return to this point later. 8. This is de re knowledge of each and every member of the group. Sarah can know of Sam that he is (isnt) F without knowing who it isviz., Samthat she knows this about. This is why Sarah can know of (or about) the added person at the table, the person ( = Sam) who makes a difference, that he is standing upright without knowing that there is an added person at the table or that he makes a difference. 9. This leads to some results that are superficially counterintuitive, but, on deeper reflection, these results are, I believe, perfectly acceptable. For example, if you paste a white sheet of paper on a matching white wall (perfect camouflage) so that people cannot distinguish the paper from its surroundings (cannot, that is, see where it is) do they nonetheless still see the paper? Yes. They certainly see something in that part of the wall. It isnt the wall behind the paper. What else is left? 10. I am thinking here, of course, of forced choices in blindsight studies and stem completion choices in priming studies of implicit (unconscious) perception. 11. Incidentally, my claim that one is conscious of individual bricks in the wall perhaps, even, of all the bricks in the wallis perfectly consistent with the claim that there is no conscious perception without attention. In their careful study of inattentional blindness Mack and Rock (1998) do not require attention to each and every object consciously perceived. As long as there is what they describe as distributed attention (Chapter 7, especially pp. 163-65) or objects fall in a zone of attention (see Chapter 4) their attentional demands on consciousness are satisfied. They count as attention to the individual objects in a multi-element array attentive viewing of the array itself. Assuming that you looked attentively at Figures 1 and 2 for a few seconds, then, you satisfied their demands on consciousness of each and every brick in the wall even though you paid no particular attention to any of them. 12. Once again (see footnote 8) it is important to understand the de re character of this putative knowledge. In saying that one knows that none of the bricks are black or tilted, I am saying one has 350 distinct pieces of knowledge about individual bricks in the wall, not (necessarily) a single piece of knowledge expressible as None of the bricks in the wall are either black or tilted. One might know something general in nature, that none of the bricks are black or tilted, but one

230 / Fred Dretske neednt know this to know, of each one of the bricks, that it is neither black nor tilted. One can have these singular pieces of knowledge about individual bricks and because of ignorance or uncertainty about whether one sees all the bricks in the wall (maybe some bricks are concealed) not have knowledge of the general truth that none of the bricks in the wall are black or tilted. So when I say that you know that none of the bricks in the wall are black or tilted, I should be understood as saying that for all x, if x is a brick in the wall, you know x to be neither black nor tilted. I am not claiming that you know that for all x, if x is a brick in the wall, x is neither black nor tilted. 13. A few seconds is enough time for six or seven saccades (involuntary movements of the eye) so it is likely that one foveates most, if not all, the bricks in such brief observations.

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