Topics in early modern philosophy of mind
著者
書誌事項
Topics in early modern philosophy of mind
(Studies in the history of philosophy of mind, v. 9)
Springer, c2009
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注記
Bibliography: p. 241-254
Includes indexes
内容説明・目次
内容説明
During the early modern era (c. 1600-1800), philosophers formulated a number of new questions, methods of investigation, and theories regarding the nature of the mind. The result of their efforts has been described as "the original cognitive revolution". Topics in Early Modern Philosophy of Mind provides a comprehensive snapshot of this exciting period in the history of thinking about the mind, presenting studies of a wide array of philosophers and topics. Written by some of today's foremost authorities on early modern philosophy, the ten chapters address issues ranging from those that have long captivated philosophers and psychologists as well as those that have been underexplored. Likewise, the papers engage figures from the history of ideas who are well-known today (Descartes, Hume, Kant) as well as those who have been comparatively neglected by contemporary scholarship (Desgabets, Boyle, Collins).
This volume will become an essential reference work that graduate students and professionals in the fields of philosophy of mind, the history of philosophy, and the history of psychology will want to own.
目次
Mental Transparency, Direct Sensation, and the Unity of the Cartesian Mind.- Wonder Among Cartesians and Natural Magicians.- Desgabets: Rationalist or Cartesian Empiricist?.- Descartes, Spinoza, and Locke on Extended Thinking Beings.- Sensation in a Malebranchean Mind.- Spinoza on Teleology, Value, and the Unity of Mind.- Spinoza's Eternal Self.- Can Matter Think? The Mind-Body Problem in the Clarke-Collins Correspondence.- Berkeley and Hume on Self and Self-Consciousness.- Making an Object of Yourself: On the Intentionality of the Passions in Hume.
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