The undivided self: Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem'
Aristotle initiated the systematic investigation of perception, the emotions, memory, desire and action, developing his own account of these phenomena and their interconnection. The aim of this book is to gain a philosophical understanding of his views and to examine how far they withstand critical...
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Main Author: | |
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Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Oxford
Oxford University Press
2021
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Edition: | First edition |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Summary: | Aristotle initiated the systematic investigation of perception, the emotions, memory, desire and action, developing his own account of these phenomena and their interconnection. The aim of this book is to gain a philosophical understanding of his views and to examine how far they withstand critical scrutiny. Aristotle's account, it is argued, constitutes a philosophically live alternative to conventional post-Cartesian thinking about psychological phenomena and their place in a material world. It offers a way to dissolve, rather than solve, the mind-body problem we have inherited |
Item Description: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 287-294) and indexes |
Physical Description: | xiii, 303 Seiten 24 cm |
ISBN: | 0198869568 9780198869566 |
Staff View
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adam_text | Contents Introduction 1 1. lhe Emotions 1.1 Fear and anger in De Аяшзя АЛ 1.2 The first moves 1.3 Physics and mathematics 1.4 The range of Aristotle’s proposal in De Anima A. 1 1.5 lhe proper way to study anger: the role of matter 1.6 The model ofDe Anima A.l 1.7 Gaps and queries 18 18 20 24 30 32 35 40 2. Enmattered Form: Aristotle’s Hylomorphism 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Two Interpretations 2.3 Snubness and S-structures 2.4 Metaphysical basis (1): Metaphysics Z.10 and 11 2.5 Metaphysical basis (2): Metaphysics H.2-4 2.6 Forms and causation 2.7 Is the matter of natural substances inseparable in definition from their forms? 2.8 Interim conclusions: a problem 2.9 Three ways of going (slightly) wrong 2.10 Summary: surviving questions 42 42 45 47 53 65 68 3. Desire and Action 3.1 An unnerving silence 3.2 How to fill the silence? 3.3 The harmony theory: problems for the non-reductionist interpretation 3.4 Desire in De Motu: Aristotle’s four-stage account 3.5 Desire, confidence, and the connate pneuma: their role in action 3.6 Instruments, joints, etc. 3.7 Desire and action: an overview of Aristotle’s account 3.8 Conclusions 94 94 95 97 102 105 110 114 115 4. Taste and Smell: With Some Remarks on Touch 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Some reminders 4.3 Perceiving: ontology refined 4.4 Perceiving: a‘mere Cambridge change’? 118 118 119 120 130 79 85 87 92
xii CONTENTS 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 Perceiving: the issue Tasting: an inextricably psycho-physical completion Tasting: problems for the spiritualist interpretation Tasting: problems for the non-reductionist materialist interpretation Tasting and smelling: a summary The case of touch Taking on the form without the matter Interim conclusions 133 136 138 144 152 153 155 162 5. Hearing, Seeing, and Hylomorphism 5.1 Hearing: the issue 5.2 Hearing: what is the sound in the medium? 5.3 Sounds, sounding, and hearing: the message 5.4 Hearing: interim conclusions 5.5 A spiritualist argument concerning seeing 5.6 What happens in the medium? 5.7 The medium (1) 5.8 The medium (2): the ‘illuminable’, fire, and the colours in the ‘illuminable’ (diaphanes) 5.9 The sense organ: seeing 5.10 Seeing: a more general perspective 163 163 165 168 171 172 174 179 182 185 188 6. Perception, Desire, and Action: Inextricably Embodied Subjects 6.1 Introduction: fiirther extensions? 6.2 The perception of moving objects: common sensibles’ 6.3 Perception, pain, pleasure, and desire: the basic model 6.4 Imagination and desire: the basic model extended 6.5 The human subject: the unity of our soul 6.6 Practical thought: an essentially enmattered type of thought? 6.7 Thought and subjects of thought 6.8 Summary 194 194 195 205 210 213 217 220 223 7. Aristotle’s Viewpoint 7.1 Common to body and soul 7.2 A first comparison: non-reductionist materialism 7.3 Partial overview 7.4 Aristotle and functionalism 7.5 Ackrill’s problem: different perspectives 7.6 Aristotle and neo-Aristotelian hylomorphism 7.7
No longer credible? 225 225 229 232 234 239 246 253 8. Aristotle’s Undivided Self 8.1 Two inextricability theses 8.2 The first inextricability thesis: the search for the purely psychological 8.3 The search for the purely psychological continued: subjectivity revisited 254 254 259 264
CONTENTS 8.4 Further arguments against essential embodiment 8.5 The second inextricabiiity thesis: the role of the purely physical 8.6 Isn’t Aristotle’s view a ‘notational variant’ of non-reductionist materialism? 8.7 Diagnosis, resolution, and remaining problems Bibliography Index Locorum General Index Index Nominum ХІІІ 269 272 276 281 287 295 299 302
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adam_txt |
Contents Introduction 1 1. lhe Emotions 1.1 Fear and anger in De Аяшзя АЛ 1.2 The first moves 1.3 Physics and mathematics 1.4 The range of Aristotle’s proposal in De Anima A. 1 1.5 lhe proper way to study anger: the role of matter 1.6 The model ofDe Anima A.l 1.7 Gaps and queries 18 18 20 24 30 32 35 40 2. Enmattered Form: Aristotle’s Hylomorphism 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Two Interpretations 2.3 Snubness and S-structures 2.4 Metaphysical basis (1): Metaphysics Z.10 and 11 2.5 Metaphysical basis (2): Metaphysics H.2-4 2.6 Forms and causation 2.7 Is the matter of natural substances inseparable in definition from their forms? 2.8 Interim conclusions: a problem 2.9 Three ways of going (slightly) wrong 2.10 Summary: surviving questions 42 42 45 47 53 65 68 3. Desire and Action 3.1 An unnerving silence 3.2 How to fill the silence? 3.3 The harmony theory: problems for the non-reductionist interpretation 3.4 Desire in De Motu: Aristotle’s four-stage account 3.5 Desire, confidence, and the connate pneuma: their role in action 3.6 Instruments, joints, etc. 3.7 Desire and action: an overview of Aristotle’s account 3.8 Conclusions 94 94 95 97 102 105 110 114 115 4. Taste and Smell: With Some Remarks on Touch 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Some reminders 4.3 Perceiving: ontology refined 4.4 Perceiving: a‘mere Cambridge change’? 118 118 119 120 130 79 85 87 92
xii CONTENTS 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 Perceiving: the issue Tasting: an inextricably psycho-physical completion Tasting: problems for the spiritualist interpretation Tasting: problems for the non-reductionist materialist interpretation Tasting and smelling: a summary The case of touch Taking on the form without the matter Interim conclusions 133 136 138 144 152 153 155 162 5. Hearing, Seeing, and Hylomorphism 5.1 Hearing: the issue 5.2 Hearing: what is the sound in the medium? 5.3 Sounds, sounding, and hearing: the message 5.4 Hearing: interim conclusions 5.5 A spiritualist argument concerning seeing 5.6 What happens in the medium? 5.7 The medium (1) 5.8 The medium (2): the ‘illuminable’, fire, and the colours in the ‘illuminable’ (diaphanes) 5.9 The sense organ: seeing 5.10 Seeing: a more general perspective 163 163 165 168 171 172 174 179 182 185 188 6. Perception, Desire, and Action: Inextricably Embodied Subjects 6.1 Introduction: fiirther extensions? 6.2 The perception of moving objects: common sensibles’ 6.3 Perception, pain, pleasure, and desire: the basic model 6.4 Imagination and desire: the basic model extended 6.5 The human subject: the unity of our soul 6.6 Practical thought: an essentially enmattered type of thought? 6.7 Thought and subjects of thought 6.8 Summary 194 194 195 205 210 213 217 220 223 7. Aristotle’s Viewpoint 7.1 Common to body and soul 7.2 A first comparison: non-reductionist materialism 7.3 Partial overview 7.4 Aristotle and functionalism 7.5 Ackrill’s problem: different perspectives 7.6 Aristotle and neo-Aristotelian hylomorphism 7.7
No longer credible? 225 225 229 232 234 239 246 253 8. Aristotle’s Undivided Self 8.1 Two inextricability theses 8.2 The first inextricability thesis: the search for the purely psychological 8.3 The search for the purely psychological continued: subjectivity revisited 254 254 259 264
CONTENTS 8.4 Further arguments against essential embodiment 8.5 The second inextricabiiity thesis: the role of the purely physical 8.6 Isn’t Aristotle’s view a ‘notational variant’ of non-reductionist materialism? 8.7 Diagnosis, resolution, and remaining problems Bibliography Index Locorum General Index Index Nominum ХІІІ 269 272 276 281 287 295 299 302 |
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spelling | Charles, David Verfasser (DE-588)124478212 aut The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' David Charles First edition Oxford Oxford University Press 2021 xiii, 303 Seiten 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references (pages 287-294) and indexes Aristotle initiated the systematic investigation of perception, the emotions, memory, desire and action, developing his own account of these phenomena and their interconnection. The aim of this book is to gain a philosophical understanding of his views and to examine how far they withstand critical scrutiny. Aristotle's account, it is argued, constitutes a philosophically live alternative to conventional post-Cartesian thinking about psychological phenomena and their place in a material world. It offers a way to dissolve, rather than solve, the mind-body problem we have inherited Aristoteles v384-v322 (DE-588)118650130 gnd rswk-swf Philosophy of Mind (DE-588)4248301-3 gnd rswk-swf Leib-Seele-Problem (DE-588)4035151-8 gnd rswk-swf Aristotle Philosophy of mind Mind and body Philosophy, Ancient Aristoteles phil. TLG 0086 (DE-2581)TH000000327 gbd Leib - Seele (DE-2581)TH000006664 gbd Aristoteles v384-v322 (DE-588)118650130 p Philosophy of Mind (DE-588)4248301-3 s Leib-Seele-Problem (DE-588)4035151-8 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-0-19-191233-7 (DE-604)BV048287105 Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032702497&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Charles, David The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' Aristoteles v384-v322 (DE-588)118650130 gnd Philosophy of Mind (DE-588)4248301-3 gnd Leib-Seele-Problem (DE-588)4035151-8 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118650130 (DE-588)4248301-3 (DE-588)4035151-8 |
title | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' |
title_auth | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' |
title_exact_search | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' |
title_exact_search_txtP | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' |
title_full | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' David Charles |
title_fullStr | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' David Charles |
title_full_unstemmed | The undivided self Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' David Charles |
title_short | The undivided self |
title_sort | the undivided self aristotle and the mind body problem |
title_sub | Aristotle and the 'mind-body problem' |
topic | Aristoteles v384-v322 (DE-588)118650130 gnd Philosophy of Mind (DE-588)4248301-3 gnd Leib-Seele-Problem (DE-588)4035151-8 gnd |
topic_facet | Aristoteles v384-v322 Philosophy of Mind Leib-Seele-Problem |
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