
a book
Holes and Other Superficialities
Roberto Casati, Achille C. Varzi · 1995 · 256 pages
-- Valentino Braitenberg, Director, Max-Planck-Institut fü r Biologische Kybernetick
"The idea of "Holes and Other Superficialities" is wonderfully counterintuitive: The authors want us to think of absences as full-fledged cognitive entities. The book describes a grand variety of holes -- holes in doughnuts, tunnels through blocks, flowing gaps in regularly-spaced flowerbed, and hundreds more. There are an enormous number of beautifully-rendered illustrations of every imaginable (and often never-before-imagined) type of hole....The overlap with philosophical issues of every sort is marvelous, and the authors have a delightful sense of humor."
-- Douglas Hofstadter, author of "Gö del, Escher, Bach"
This fascinating investigation on the borderlines of metaphysics, everyday geometry, and the theory of perception seeks to answer two basic questions: Do holes really exist? And if so, what are they? Holes are among entities that down-to-earth philosophers would like to expel from their ontological inventory. Casati and Varzi argue in favor of their existence and explore the consequences of this unorthodox approach -- odd as these might appear. They examine the ontology of holes, their geometry, their part-whole relations, their identity, their causal role, and the ways we perceive them.
A Bradford Book
recommended by 1 person
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Paul Bloom
“@TomerUllman @levels_of @chris_starmans @RobertTalisse Such a cool topic. One of my favourite philosophy books is a deep dive (!) into holes:”↗