This article proposes "Proto-Perception Theory" (yuan gan zhi lun 元感知论), a new theoretical framework for redefining poetic perception. Western metaphysics since Descartes has presupposed perception as a unidirectional act initiated by the human subject: the human perceives nature; nature is perceived. This article challenges that default contract by proposing that in the "proto-moment"—before the conceptual division of "self" and "world"—perception is a complete, indivisible event. The pre-Socratic philosopher Anaxagoras (c. 500–428 BCE) provides the ancient Greek foundation for this theory through his concept ofNous(Mind): a cosmic intelligence immanent in all things rather than exclusive to human beings. From this foundation, the article derives three core propositions: (1) perception precedes the subject-object divide; (2) natural entities themselves possess subjectivity; and (3) the poet's role is that of a passage—a linguistic organ through which natural entities perceive themselves. The article summons an expanded cross-cultural assembly of witnesses spanning eleven poets and thinkers—Tao Yuanming, Xie Lingyun, Wang Wei, Han Shan, Goethe, Rilke, Ezra Pound, Tomas Tranströmer, Mary Oliver, Gary Snyder, and W.S. Merwin—each testifying, in their own historical moment and cultural idiom, to the same recurring intuition: that the arrow of perception can fly from world to human, that the mountain can look back. Extended philosophical engagements with phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty'schair), ecological thought (Bennett's vibrant matter, Morton's dark ecology), and contemporary poetics address potential objections from analytic philosophy, linguistics, and ecocriticism, each engagement sharpening the theory's conceptual edge. In the Anthropocene, Proto-Perception offers poetry a genuinely new path: not through the moral appeal of protecting nature, but through the perceptual shift of recognizing nature as an equal perceiving subject. The article concludes by returning to its opening scene—a frozen lake, a cracking sound—and finding there, in the ice's own perceptual act, the completed circle of a theory that was always already latent in the world's self-manifestation.
Bo Xia (Wed,) studied this question.
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