Charles Bonnet and the Order of the KnownSpringer Netherlands, 1982 M07 31 - 159 páginas Charles Bonnet began his career as a naturalist, from an early age establishing a reputation as a careful observer. It is for those youthful observations, as well as for some suggestive speculations proposed relative to this field, that he is best remembered in English-speaking countries: regarding the taxonomic de mands of natural history he refurbished the idea of a chain of beings; regarding the question of generation he marshaled evidence in support of preforma tion theory; and regarding the analysis of the physiology of the nervous system he advanced a theory that individual nerve fibers receive and retain specific sensations. Following his loss of eyesight in his mid-twenties Bonnet entered a more reflective period, turning to philosophy and pondering the nature of human understanding - considerations he had formerly disdained, but that now seemed a natural outgrowth of his reflections on nature. This essay focuses on the philosophical and psychological works of the later period, the period in which he wrote all his major books. By giving these writings a broader exposure it has been one of my hopes that Bonnet's audience would also be broadened, releasing him, so to speak, from the charge of historians of science so that he might fmd his way, in general books on the "Enlightenment", from scattered footnotes into the texts themselves. |
Contenido
Intellectual Development | 1 |
Taxonomy | 34 |
Signs and Ideas | 59 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
abstract according activities analysis animals appears apperceives arbitrary sign arrangement body Bonnet's thought brain Buffon capacity century chain Chapter Charles Bonnet concept concern Condillac connection consequently constitutes Contemplation Cramer derives determinations dispositions eighteenth-century Encyclopédie entirely epigenesis epistemological Essai analytique Essai de psychologie everything faculties force Foucault function Grammaire habit Haller Helvetius human Ibid impressions individual John Locke knowledge l'origine laws Leibniz Locke Locke's logic Logique matter means mechanism Méditations Mémoires memory method Michel Foucault mind moral movements natural history natural sign nerve fibers never notion object observation Oeuvres operations Order of Things organized origin of language Palingénésie particular perceptions perfection personality Philalethe philosophy physical Port-Royal preexisting germs preformation preformationists present problem question rational reason Réaumur reflective represent representation result Rousseau Savioz sensations sense sensible ideas sentient sentiment soul soul's species speculations structure taxonomy Theodicy theory tion understanding unity universal
Referencias a este libro
The Mendelian Revolution: The Emergence of Hereditarian Concepts in Modern ... Peter Bowler Sin vista previa disponible - 1989 |
The Light of Nature: Essays in the History and Philosophy of Science ... J.D. North,J.J. Roche Vista previa limitada - 1985 |