This paper examines the importance of the theory of intellectual cognition in the development of early modern philosophy. It compares three conceptions of the intellect, held respectively by some scholastic Aristotelians, Descartes, and Locke. Examination of these three cases provides an opportunity to locate early modern discussions of the cognitive faculties in relation to recent understandings of psychology, epistemology, logic, mind, and their relations. The early modern discussions are not easily fit into the modern categories of epistemology and psychology. Reflection on this fact may help us to delimit more precisely and to see some problems in recent concepts of naturalism in relation to philosophy and psychology
The 17th century saw an enormous amount of energy dedicated to the question of whether matter can th...
It is plausible to think that before the emergence of terms like “consciousness” and “Bewusstsein,” ...
The essay concerns itself with the concept of mind in John Locke's and René Descartes' philosophy. T...
This paper examines the importance of the theory of intellectual cognition in the development of ear...
Two stories have dominated the historiography of early modern philosophy: one in which a seventeenth...
The paper begins with a comparison between the history of the neologisms of ontology and psychology....
International audienceIn this paper, I study the early modern relationship between imagination and k...
Psychology in the current sense of the word had not yet emerged in the early modern period. The term...
Ideas about soul and body – about thinking or remembering, mind and life, brain and self – remain bo...
We examine the doctrine of the association of ideas in early modern thought, as linked both to empir...
This work studies early modern thought concerning the ontology of ideas. I endeavor to establish, co...
How can we think all that we actually do think? What is the nature of human knowledge, and what are ...
The chapter deals with the notion of thought experiment in modern philosophy especially in Seventeen...
University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection, MS LJS 429, is a small book...
The chapter gives a general description of philosophical psychology as it was practiced and taught i...
The 17th century saw an enormous amount of energy dedicated to the question of whether matter can th...
It is plausible to think that before the emergence of terms like “consciousness” and “Bewusstsein,” ...
The essay concerns itself with the concept of mind in John Locke's and René Descartes' philosophy. T...
This paper examines the importance of the theory of intellectual cognition in the development of ear...
Two stories have dominated the historiography of early modern philosophy: one in which a seventeenth...
The paper begins with a comparison between the history of the neologisms of ontology and psychology....
International audienceIn this paper, I study the early modern relationship between imagination and k...
Psychology in the current sense of the word had not yet emerged in the early modern period. The term...
Ideas about soul and body – about thinking or remembering, mind and life, brain and self – remain bo...
We examine the doctrine of the association of ideas in early modern thought, as linked both to empir...
This work studies early modern thought concerning the ontology of ideas. I endeavor to establish, co...
How can we think all that we actually do think? What is the nature of human knowledge, and what are ...
The chapter deals with the notion of thought experiment in modern philosophy especially in Seventeen...
University of Pennsylvania Libraries, Lawrence J. Schoenberg Collection, MS LJS 429, is a small book...
The chapter gives a general description of philosophical psychology as it was practiced and taught i...
The 17th century saw an enormous amount of energy dedicated to the question of whether matter can th...
It is plausible to think that before the emergence of terms like “consciousness” and “Bewusstsein,” ...
The essay concerns itself with the concept of mind in John Locke's and René Descartes' philosophy. T...