Self and Sensibility
Essays in Eighteenth-Century Philosophy of Mind
This volume collects 19 of the author’s essays on eighteenth-century accounts of self-consciousness, personal identity and related issues, covering over a hundred years of a philosophical debate that has shaped the way in which these topics are discussed today. After a detailed analysis of the seventeenth-century background, the essays analyze and critically evaluate French, British and German contributions, ranging from Claude Buffier early in the century to Kant and aspects of the Post-Kantian debate. The essays deal with a large number of diverse sources, including the views and arguments of well-known philosophers such as Hume and Kant, as well as lesser-known thinkers, such as LeLarge de Lignac and Thomas Cooper, organized around four, partly overlapping main themes: a) the self and its identity as a matter of a special 'feeling' ( sentiment intime , Selbstgefüh l) in thinkers such as Condillac, Rousseau and Feder, b) materialist treatments of these issues in, for example, Priestley and Hißmann, c) Scottish Common Sense accounts, with a special focus on Reid, and d) Kant’s analysis and the philosophical context in which it was developed, with a particular emphasis on the German debate (Wolff and his critics, Lossius, Tetens and others).
Autor: | Thiel, Udo |
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ISBN: | 9783111387130 |
Auflage: | 1 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Seitenzahl: | 480 |
Produktart: | Gebunden |
Herausgeber: | Hüning, Dieter Klingner, Stefan Motta, Giuseppe Stiening, Gideon |
Verlag: | De Gruyter |
Veröffentlicht: | 02.12.2024 |
Untertitel: | Essays in Eighteenth-Century Philosophy of Mind |
Schlagworte: | Aufklärung Cognition theory Enlightenment Erkenntnistheorie Immanuel John Kant Kant, Immanuel Locke Locke, John |
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