“…He defined attention as a habit, meaning a haptic perception of reality. "Such reception cannot be understood in terms of concentrated attention [ …], produced not so much by way of attention as by way of habit (distraction)" [62], meaning it is not guided by the visual, but rather based on the experiential, where the core of perception takes place [63]. Thinkers like Hildebrand, Wölffin, Riegl, and Benjamin, defined, reversed, and challenged such diverse perceptual categories as near vs distant, tactile vs optical, and distraction vs attention.…”