Abstract

Few controversies in the history of psychology have endured so long as the one between nativism and empiricism regarding the perception of visual space. While points of emphasis have shifted and descriptive terms have changed, modern perceptual theories are still divided between the nativistic and the empiricist points of view. Though most researches on the perception of space during the past few decades have ignored or minimized this conflict, the issue inevitably reappears whenever one considers systematically the general problem of spatial perception.

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