Generally speaking, the notion of point of view has been underestimated in philosophy. Nonetheless, it can help to shred new light on many contemporary philosophical debates. Here we want to put this claim to the test in relation to the quarrel between realism and anti-realism and the question of how does our cognitive activity constitute the reality we perceive. First we want to reconsider the idea according to which it is our responsiveness to the salience of the world (of many of its features) what articulates our interaction with it; and secondly we would like to show that this responsiveness follows what might be called an affective logic.
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