| |
| | Classics in the History of Psychology -- Koffka (1922) |
 | | Our question now appears to be more difficult, but my answer is that the intermetric intervals belong quite as much to the whole experience as do the intrametric intervals, only they belong to it in a different manner. |
 | | Or take a visual analogy: In Figure 5 the intervals ab, bc, are different from the intervals aa, bb, cc, though both belong to the "fence-phenomenon." In trying to describe this difference we find one very, striking feature which we shall here single out. |
 | | The cross in Figure 6, reproduced from Rubin, may be experienced either as a white cross on a fl ground, or as a fl cross on a white ground (neglecting other less important effects). |
| psy.ed.asu.edu /~classics/Koffka/Perception/perception.htm (19184 words) |
|