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South African Journal of Philosophy, 2006
Descartes' morals are often considered a marginal epiphenomenon not only with respect to his metaphysics, but also in regard to the ethical theories that preceded and followed it, that is, broadly Aristotle's eudaimonism, Kantian deontologism and Mill's utilitarianism.
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Descartes' morals are often considered a marginal epiphenomenon not only with respect to his metaphysics, but also in regard to the ethical theories that preceded and followed it, that is, broadly Aristotle's eudaimonism, Kantian deontologism and Mill's utilitarianism.
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Journal of Analytical Psychology, 2008
Abstract: René Descartes is often regarded as the ‘father of modern philosophy’. He was a key figure in instigating the scientific revolution that has been so influential in shaping our modern world. He has been revered and reviled in almost equal measure for this role; on the one hand seen as liberating science from religion, on the other as ...
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Abstract: René Descartes is often regarded as the ‘father of modern philosophy’. He was a key figure in instigating the scientific revolution that has been so influential in shaping our modern world. He has been revered and reviled in almost equal measure for this role; on the one hand seen as liberating science from religion, on the other as ...
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Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie, 2001
In the last twenty or so years, there has been a trend, increasingly viable especially in the Anglophone world, in the study of Descartes towards regarding his intellectual milieu as a source of significant input for the understanding of his philosophical work. In this note, I wish to take account of one significant contribution to this trend, which is
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In the last twenty or so years, there has been a trend, increasingly viable especially in the Anglophone world, in the study of Descartes towards regarding his intellectual milieu as a source of significant input for the understanding of his philosophical work. In this note, I wish to take account of one significant contribution to this trend, which is
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Hospital Practice, 1990
Abstract It Is Four O’Clock in the morning, and I am lying in bed in the Hotel Continental in Yokohama. A number of thoughts are unfolding, doubtless related to jet lag, surviving the feared puffer fish at a delicious dinner last night, and visiting Daibutsu, a very large Buddha statue, at Kamakura.
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Abstract It Is Four O’Clock in the morning, and I am lying in bed in the Hotel Continental in Yokohama. A number of thoughts are unfolding, doubtless related to jet lag, surviving the feared puffer fish at a delicious dinner last night, and visiting Daibutsu, a very large Buddha statue, at Kamakura.
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Descartes Embodied Psychology: Descartes or Damasios Error?
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences, 2001Damasio (1994) claims that Descartes imagined thinking as an activity separate from the body, and that the effort to understand the mind in general biological terms was retarded as a consequence of Descartes' dualism. These claims do not hold; they are "Damasio's error". Descartes never considered what we today call thinking or cognition without taking
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2019
This chapter points out some issues about Cartesian geometry and Descartes’s program of solving geometrical problems by means of algebraic analysis. With this aim, it extends the corpus to Descartes’s mathematical correspondence and takes into account recent interpretations.
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This chapter points out some issues about Cartesian geometry and Descartes’s program of solving geometrical problems by means of algebraic analysis. With this aim, it extends the corpus to Descartes’s mathematical correspondence and takes into account recent interpretations.
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2008
Descartes, especially, was considered to be responsible for the division between empirically grounded philosophy, on the one hand, and rationalistic deduction from first principles, on the other. A closer look at Descartes? research practice, however, reveals this picture as dramatically simplified.
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Descartes, especially, was considered to be responsible for the division between empirically grounded philosophy, on the one hand, and rationalistic deduction from first principles, on the other. A closer look at Descartes? research practice, however, reveals this picture as dramatically simplified.
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