Language, Culture and Cognition from Descartes to Lewes: Value Inquiry Book Series / Cognitive Science, cartea 375
Autor Timo Kaitaroen Limba Engleză Hardback – 14 mar 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004507234
ISBN-10: 900450723X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Value Inquiry Book Series / Cognitive Science
ISBN-10: 900450723X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Value Inquiry Book Series / Cognitive Science
Notă biografică
Timo Kaitaro, Ph.D. (1995), is a neuropsychologist and adjunct professor of the history of philosophy at the University of Helsinki. He is the author of Diderot’s Holism (Peter Lang, 1997) and Le Surréalisme: Pour un réalisme sans rivage (L’Harmattan, 2008).
Cuprins
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
part 1
From the Institutions of Nature to Symbolic Cognition
1The Natural and Artificial Body in Cartesian Philosophy
1 Descartes and the Bodily Institutions
2 La Forge and Malebranche
2Hobbes and the Citizens of the Realm of Truth
1 From Marks to Signs
2 Access to the Realm of Truth
3 From Ideas to Representations
3Locke: Combining Ideas with a Little Help from Words
1 The Portion of Nature
2 The Architecture of Ideas
3 The Role of Language in Human Understanding
4 Distinctions Created by Human Institutions
4Leibniz, Wolff, and Symbolic Cognition in the German Tradition
1 Leibniz
2 Christian Wolff
part 2
The Natural and the Artificial Human during the Enlightenment
5Daniel Defoe and the Wild Boy
6Hume and the Artificial in Human Understanding
1 The Natural Mechanisms of Human Nature
2 Personal Identity
3 Passions and Nature
4 Vice, Virtue and Taste
5 Morals and the Artificial Nature of Humans
7Condillac and Diderot on the Role of Artificial Signs in Cognition
1 Locke’s Error
2 Needs, Will and Social Interaction
3 The Architecture of Memory
4 After the Essai
5 The Problem of Inversions
6 Diderot and the Deaf
7 Languages as Methods of Analysis
8 The Discursive Order and the Art of Reason
8La Mettrie: Man as an Artefact
1 Man a Machine
2 Homo Duplex
9The Nature of Morality: Diderot, Helvétius and Rousseau
1 Diderot and the Vices and Virtues of Nature
2 Helvétius vs. Diderot
3 Rousseau
4 Condillac and the Natural Needs
10Maupertuis and the Debates in the Berlin Academy
1 Maupertuis and the Lack of Correspondence between Language and Ideas
2 The Debates at the Berlin Academy
11Herder: From the Language of a Silent Loner to Human Perfection
1 Men and Animals
2 The Word as Recognition
3 Sounds and Other Sensations
4 The Innateness of Language Ability
5 Herder, Hamann and Kant
12Hamann and the Primacy of Language and Tradition
1 The Problem of Word Order
2 The Origin of Language
3 The Transcendental Perspective
part 3
The Condillacian Heritage and Beyond
13The Idéologues: The Semiotics and Physiology of Culture
1 Cabanis’s Social Physiology
2 Sensations and Language
3 Nature and Art
4 Holistic Organicism
5 Destutt de Tracy’s Ideology: Back to the Lockean Order, with a Twist
6 Sensing and Thinking
7 Thought and Language
8 Language as Calculus
9 Maine de Biran and Signs in Action
10 From Impressions to Ideas
11 Imagination, Language and Memory Again
12 Mind Playing Hide-and-Seek with Itself
13 Reclaiming Passions by Signs
14 The Two Sciences of Man
15 Maine de Biran and the Condillacian Tradition
14The Divine Origins of Language
1 Süßmilch’s Proof of the Divine Origin of Language
2 Bonald and Language as the Deliverer of Ideas
3 Animals and Humans
4 The Impossibility of Inventing Language
5 Bonald and Condillac
15Back to the Institutions of Nature: Gall and Spurzheim
1 Faculties and Organs
2 Men and Animals
3 Language and ideas
16Humboldt: Language and the Creation of National Character
1 Concepts and Language
2 The Origins and Development of Language
3 Overcoming the Limits of Language
4 The Perfection of Language by Inflection
5 The Holistic Nature of Language
6 Nationality, Individuality and Language
7 Writing as the Analysis of Language
8 Humboldt and His French Predecessors
17G. H. Lewes and Symbolic Thought
1 The Social Organism
2 Ideation as the Algebra of Feeling
3 From Sensations to a Historical a Priori
Conclusions: From the Institutions of Nature to History and Culture
1 Words and Ideas in the Empiricist Tradition
2 Symbolic Thought and Sensation
3 Language, Nature and Society
4 From Collections to Structures – From Individuals to Historical Wholes
5 Language, History and Nationhood
6 Telling a Different Story on the Origin of Ideas
AppendixTranslations of French and German Quotations (by the Author, Unless Otherwise Indicated)
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
part 1
From the Institutions of Nature to Symbolic Cognition
1The Natural and Artificial Body in Cartesian Philosophy
1 Descartes and the Bodily Institutions
2 La Forge and Malebranche
2Hobbes and the Citizens of the Realm of Truth
1 From Marks to Signs
2 Access to the Realm of Truth
3 From Ideas to Representations
3Locke: Combining Ideas with a Little Help from Words
1 The Portion of Nature
2 The Architecture of Ideas
3 The Role of Language in Human Understanding
4 Distinctions Created by Human Institutions
4Leibniz, Wolff, and Symbolic Cognition in the German Tradition
1 Leibniz
2 Christian Wolff
part 2
The Natural and the Artificial Human during the Enlightenment
5Daniel Defoe and the Wild Boy
6Hume and the Artificial in Human Understanding
1 The Natural Mechanisms of Human Nature
2 Personal Identity
3 Passions and Nature
4 Vice, Virtue and Taste
5 Morals and the Artificial Nature of Humans
7Condillac and Diderot on the Role of Artificial Signs in Cognition
1 Locke’s Error
2 Needs, Will and Social Interaction
3 The Architecture of Memory
4 After the Essai
5 The Problem of Inversions
6 Diderot and the Deaf
7 Languages as Methods of Analysis
8 The Discursive Order and the Art of Reason
8La Mettrie: Man as an Artefact
1 Man a Machine
2 Homo Duplex
9The Nature of Morality: Diderot, Helvétius and Rousseau
1 Diderot and the Vices and Virtues of Nature
2 Helvétius vs. Diderot
3 Rousseau
4 Condillac and the Natural Needs
10Maupertuis and the Debates in the Berlin Academy
1 Maupertuis and the Lack of Correspondence between Language and Ideas
2 The Debates at the Berlin Academy
11Herder: From the Language of a Silent Loner to Human Perfection
1 Men and Animals
2 The Word as Recognition
3 Sounds and Other Sensations
4 The Innateness of Language Ability
5 Herder, Hamann and Kant
12Hamann and the Primacy of Language and Tradition
1 The Problem of Word Order
2 The Origin of Language
3 The Transcendental Perspective
part 3
The Condillacian Heritage and Beyond
13The Idéologues: The Semiotics and Physiology of Culture
1 Cabanis’s Social Physiology
2 Sensations and Language
3 Nature and Art
4 Holistic Organicism
5 Destutt de Tracy’s Ideology: Back to the Lockean Order, with a Twist
6 Sensing and Thinking
7 Thought and Language
8 Language as Calculus
9 Maine de Biran and Signs in Action
10 From Impressions to Ideas
11 Imagination, Language and Memory Again
12 Mind Playing Hide-and-Seek with Itself
13 Reclaiming Passions by Signs
14 The Two Sciences of Man
15 Maine de Biran and the Condillacian Tradition
14The Divine Origins of Language
1 Süßmilch’s Proof of the Divine Origin of Language
2 Bonald and Language as the Deliverer of Ideas
3 Animals and Humans
4 The Impossibility of Inventing Language
5 Bonald and Condillac
15Back to the Institutions of Nature: Gall and Spurzheim
1 Faculties and Organs
2 Men and Animals
3 Language and ideas
16Humboldt: Language and the Creation of National Character
1 Concepts and Language
2 The Origins and Development of Language
3 Overcoming the Limits of Language
4 The Perfection of Language by Inflection
5 The Holistic Nature of Language
6 Nationality, Individuality and Language
7 Writing as the Analysis of Language
8 Humboldt and His French Predecessors
17G. H. Lewes and Symbolic Thought
1 The Social Organism
2 Ideation as the Algebra of Feeling
3 From Sensations to a Historical a Priori
Conclusions: From the Institutions of Nature to History and Culture
1 Words and Ideas in the Empiricist Tradition
2 Symbolic Thought and Sensation
3 Language, Nature and Society
4 From Collections to Structures – From Individuals to Historical Wholes
5 Language, History and Nationhood
6 Telling a Different Story on the Origin of Ideas
AppendixTranslations of French and German Quotations (by the Author, Unless Otherwise Indicated)
Bibliography
Index