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- Title
Blindness and the age of enlightenment: Diderot's letter on the blind.
- Authors
Margo, Curtis E; Harman, Lynn E; Smith, Don B
- Abstract
Several months after anonymously publishing an essay in 1749 with the title "Letter on the Blind for the Use of Those Who Can See," the chief editor of the French Encyclopédie was arrested and taken to the prison fortress of Vincennes just east of Paris, France. The correctly assumed author, Denis Diderot, was 35 years old and had not yet left his imprint on the Age of Enlightenment. His letter, which recounted the life of Nicolas Saunderson, a blind mathematician, was intended to advance secular empiricism and disparage the religiously tinged rationalism put forward by Rene Descartes. The letter's discussion of sensory perception in men born blind dismissed the supposed primacy of visual imagery in abstract thinking. The essay did little to resolve any philosophical controversy, but it marked a turning point in Western attitudes toward visual disability.
- Publication
JAMA Ophthalmology, 2013, Vol 131, Issue 1, p98
- ISSN
2168-6165
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2013.559