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The spiritual automaton [Texte imprimé] : Spinoza's science of the mind / Eugene Marshall

بواسطة:نوع المادة : نصنصتفاصيل النشر:Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2013وصف:1 vol. (242 p.) ; 24 cmتدمك:
  • 978-0-19967553-1
الموضوع:تصنيف DDC:
  • 199.492 23E
تصنيفات أخرى:
  • 190
المحتويات:
1. Introduction and Background -- 1. General Introduction -- 2. Background -- 2.1. Ideas -- 2.2. Inadequate Ideas -- 2.3. Inadequate Ideas, Essences, and Representation -- 3. Conclusion of the Introduction -- 2. Adequate Ideas are Innate -- 1. Introduction -- 2.The Challenge -- 3. Adequacy -- 3.1. The Common Notions -- 3.2. God's Essence -- 3.3. Particular Essences -- 4. Innateness -- 4.1. Skepticism Concerning Innateness in Spinoza -- 4.2. Leibniz and Spinoza on Innateness -- 5. Conclusion -- 3. Power, Conatus, and Affects -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Power of Acting -- 2.1. Modes of Substance and the Power of Acting -- 2.2. On Complex Individuals -- 2.3. Ideas and Power -- 3. Conatus -- 3.1. A Tendency to Persevere -- 3.2. The Tendency in Complex Individuals -- 4. Affects of the Mind -- 5. Adequate Ideas and Active Affects -- 5.1. Rejecting the Human Inadequacy Argument -- 5.2. Being an Adequate Cause -- 5.3. Adequacy and Explanation -- 6. Conclusion -- 4. Affects and Consciousness -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1. A Note on Consciousness Terms in Spinoza -- 2. Competing Theories -- 2.1. Ideas of Ideas -- 2.2. Complexity -- 2.3. The Power of an Idea
3. A Theory of Consciousness in Spinoza -- 3.1. What Would a Good Account of Consciousness Look Like? -- 3.2. Consciousness as Affectivity -- 3.3. More Than Just Emotions -- 3.4. The Richness of Affectivity -- 3.5. Consciousness and Desire -- 3.6. Affectivity and the Ethical Project -- 4. Objections -- 4.1. Avoiding Old Objections -- 4.2. Addressing New Concerns -- 4.3. An Evaluation and Summary of the Interpretation -- 5. Conclusion -- 5. Moral Psychology and Bondage -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Bondage and Freedom -- 2.1. Two Senses of Freedom -- 2.2. Freedom and Action -- 2.3. Freedom and Living According to Reason -- 2.4. A Few Conclusions So Far -- 3. The Mechanisms of Bondage -- 3.1. The Illusion of Free Will -- 3.2. Affects and Akrasia -- 3.3. Mind as Affective Mechanism -- 3.4. Akrasia in Spinoza -- 3.5. The Mechanisms of Bondage and Akrasia -- 4. Conclusion -- 6. Freedom, Therapy, and Salvation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Affective Mechanisms of Freedom -- 2.1. The Mechanisms of Freedom -- 2.2. Further Mechanisms -- 3. Blessedness, Salvation, and the Soul -- 3.1. Our Highest Happiness and Blessedness -- 3.2. Faith and Salvation -- 3.3. Consciousness and the Eternity of the Soul -- 4. Final Conclusions
نوع المادة:
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المقتنيات
نوع المادة المكتبة الحالية المجموعة رقم الطلب رقم النسخة حالة تاريخ الإستحقاق الباركود
Livre Livre Bibliothèque centrale En accès libre Collection générale 190 / 1264 (إستعراض الرف(يفتح أدناه)) 1 المتاح 000006705039

Bibliogr. p. [233]-239

1. Introduction and Background -- 1. General Introduction -- 2. Background -- 2.1. Ideas -- 2.2. Inadequate Ideas -- 2.3. Inadequate Ideas, Essences, and Representation -- 3. Conclusion of the Introduction -- 2. Adequate Ideas are Innate -- 1. Introduction -- 2.The Challenge -- 3. Adequacy -- 3.1. The Common Notions -- 3.2. God's Essence -- 3.3. Particular Essences -- 4. Innateness -- 4.1. Skepticism Concerning Innateness in Spinoza -- 4.2. Leibniz and Spinoza on Innateness -- 5. Conclusion -- 3. Power, Conatus, and Affects -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Power of Acting -- 2.1. Modes of Substance and the Power of Acting -- 2.2. On Complex Individuals -- 2.3. Ideas and Power -- 3. Conatus -- 3.1. A Tendency to Persevere -- 3.2. The Tendency in Complex Individuals -- 4. Affects of the Mind -- 5. Adequate Ideas and Active Affects -- 5.1. Rejecting the Human Inadequacy Argument -- 5.2. Being an Adequate Cause -- 5.3. Adequacy and Explanation -- 6. Conclusion -- 4. Affects and Consciousness -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1. A Note on Consciousness Terms in Spinoza -- 2. Competing Theories -- 2.1. Ideas of Ideas -- 2.2. Complexity -- 2.3. The Power of an Idea

3. A Theory of Consciousness in Spinoza -- 3.1. What Would a Good Account of Consciousness Look Like? -- 3.2. Consciousness as Affectivity -- 3.3. More Than Just Emotions -- 3.4. The Richness of Affectivity -- 3.5. Consciousness and Desire -- 3.6. Affectivity and the Ethical Project -- 4. Objections -- 4.1. Avoiding Old Objections -- 4.2. Addressing New Concerns -- 4.3. An Evaluation and Summary of the Interpretation -- 5. Conclusion -- 5. Moral Psychology and Bondage -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Bondage and Freedom -- 2.1. Two Senses of Freedom -- 2.2. Freedom and Action -- 2.3. Freedom and Living According to Reason -- 2.4. A Few Conclusions So Far -- 3. The Mechanisms of Bondage -- 3.1. The Illusion of Free Will -- 3.2. Affects and Akrasia -- 3.3. Mind as Affective Mechanism -- 3.4. Akrasia in Spinoza -- 3.5. The Mechanisms of Bondage and Akrasia -- 4. Conclusion -- 6. Freedom, Therapy, and Salvation -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Affective Mechanisms of Freedom -- 2.1. The Mechanisms of Freedom -- 2.2. Further Mechanisms -- 3. Blessedness, Salvation, and the Soul -- 3.1. Our Highest Happiness and Blessedness -- 3.2. Faith and Salvation -- 3.3. Consciousness and the Eternity of the Soul -- 4. Final Conclusions

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