In the example chosen for this discussion, I have supposed two persons, each of whom experiences a visual perception.
It is not a difference of nature, an opposition of two essences, or of two worlds--it is simply a difference of object; just that which separates my visual perception of a tree and my visual perception of a dog.
At the same time an observer, armed with a microscope à la Jules Verne, looks into my brain and observes there a certain molecular dance which accompanies my visual perception.
The two images of the single object, in the arbitrary language of visual perception, are, as it were, two words significant of one notion.
Moreover, neither consciousness nor the ahamkâra are objects of visual perception.
Before we attribute such vast powers to these Ideas or phantasms, the shadows of visual perception, it will be convenient to inquire into their nature, and endeavour to ascertain the laws by which they are regulated.
Ideas are the memorial phantasms of visual perception, a largess bestowed, perhaps exclusively, on the sense of sight, and this bounty contributes essentially to the acquirement and retention of knowledge.
We see the ground and remember the jug (which is absent) and thus in the mind rises the notion of non-existence which has no reference at all to visual perception.
But the Buddhists further object that there is no reason why one should identify a thing seen at the present moment as being that which was seen before, for this identity is never the object of visual perception.
The conditions that lead to the production of such knowledge (such as the presence of full light and proximity to the eye in the case of seeing an object by visual perception) have but little relevancy in this connection.
For the sake of brevity we might say that they are those due to errors of visual perception.
Again, when any object of visual perception is indistinct or indefinite in form, there is plainly an opening for this capricious play of fancy in transforming the actual.
The most interesting case of this invisual perception is that of a disturbance or displacement of the organ by external force.
But whatever the significance he may put into the term, any such attempt at grouping the lower forms must prove unsatisfactory from the very start on account of the scant data which we possess on visual perception in animals.
Let us turn now from the consideration of visual perception to that of auditory perception in the horse.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "visual perception" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.