This paper focuses on Paul of Venice’s realist theory of direct knowledge. In the second half of the 13th century human knowledge was standardly viewed as a process of abstraction enabling the human intellect to grasp the essences of corporeal things, regardless of the matter in which they are embodied. This process was achieved thanks to the mediation of mental entities (species intelligibiles) representing the dematerialised objects in the intellect. By the late 13th and early 14th centuries, however, some authors began to regard this account as unsatisfactory. These authors held that assuming the existence of mediating species (considered themselves as objects of knowledge) amounts to thinking that between ourselves and the world there i...
Aristotle thinks all our knowledge comes from perception. Yet he doesn't say much about the sense in...
In this essay, I argue that a proper understanding of the Cartesian proof of the external world shed...
The representative theory of perception is one of the realist theories of perception which maintains...
Giles of Rome maintains that the senses are passive powers and more specif-ically receptive powers, ...
As we now know, most, if not all, philosophers in the High Middle Ages agreed that what we immediate...
This article is devoted to understanding the five human senses in European philosophy, culture and ...
Three widespread assumptions about the human senses are challenged. These are that we have five sens...
This paper is a hermeneutic exposition of the problem of illusion in sense perception, using the met...
According to Berkeley, God’s activity explains human sensory perception. Berkeley draws heavily on D...
This text provides an overview of medieval accounts of perceptionNon peer reviewe
Since the demise of the Sense-Datum Theory and Phenomenalism in the last century, Direct Realism in ...
Since antique Greece, philosophers as Plato and Aristotle discussed about the phenomena of senses a...
Perception is the ultimate source of our knowledge about contingent facts. It is an extremely import...
The privileging of a particular sense in the elaboration of a metaphysics is a well-known theme, and...
This is an excerpt of Aquinas' proof of the existence of God. In proving God's existence, Aquinas la...
Aristotle thinks all our knowledge comes from perception. Yet he doesn't say much about the sense in...
In this essay, I argue that a proper understanding of the Cartesian proof of the external world shed...
The representative theory of perception is one of the realist theories of perception which maintains...
Giles of Rome maintains that the senses are passive powers and more specif-ically receptive powers, ...
As we now know, most, if not all, philosophers in the High Middle Ages agreed that what we immediate...
This article is devoted to understanding the five human senses in European philosophy, culture and ...
Three widespread assumptions about the human senses are challenged. These are that we have five sens...
This paper is a hermeneutic exposition of the problem of illusion in sense perception, using the met...
According to Berkeley, God’s activity explains human sensory perception. Berkeley draws heavily on D...
This text provides an overview of medieval accounts of perceptionNon peer reviewe
Since the demise of the Sense-Datum Theory and Phenomenalism in the last century, Direct Realism in ...
Since antique Greece, philosophers as Plato and Aristotle discussed about the phenomena of senses a...
Perception is the ultimate source of our knowledge about contingent facts. It is an extremely import...
The privileging of a particular sense in the elaboration of a metaphysics is a well-known theme, and...
This is an excerpt of Aquinas' proof of the existence of God. In proving God's existence, Aquinas la...
Aristotle thinks all our knowledge comes from perception. Yet he doesn't say much about the sense in...
In this essay, I argue that a proper understanding of the Cartesian proof of the external world shed...
The representative theory of perception is one of the realist theories of perception which maintains...