0000000000968703

AUTHOR

Vili Lähteenmäki

showing 11 related works from this author

Anthony Collins on the Status of Consciousness

2014

Anthony Collins (1676-1729) maintains that consciousness might be a material process or result from material processes. On the one hand, Collins accepts Locke’s view that from consciousness, i.e., the activity of thinking, we acquire no knowledge about the nature of the thinking substance. On the other, he takes seriously Samuel Clarke’s challenge that the thinking substance must be suitably unified because consciousness is unified. In this paper, I argue that, throughout his correspondence with Clarke, Collins maintains that consciousness signifies actual thinking and does not refer to the capacity of thinking. His main materialist thesis is that the powers of parts of material systems can…

Historymedia_common.quotation_subjectMaterial systemIntellectual historyEpistemologyMedieval historyPower (social and political)PhilosophyPanpsychismSocial consciousnessConsciousnessMaterialismPsychologymedia_common
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On the Historiography of Subjectivity

2014

SubjectivityMedieval historyLiteraturePhilosophyHistorybusiness.industryPhilosophysubjectivityitsetajuntaHistoriographybusinessIntellectual historyVivarium
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Locke and Active Perception

2014

This article examines whether Locke can consistently maintain that perception is a fully passive process. His view is put under scrutiny under two senses of activity. Does Locke reject active perception in light of his own understanding of activity; or rather, does he treat perception as passive in that the mind has only a general capacity of reception of ideas and does not contribute in specific ways to organizing specific types of perceptions? Locke’s view of perception is evaluated in these respects in three contexts: the role of noticing in perception, visual perception of shape, and reflection as a form of inner perception. It is argued that with respect to noticing and reflection Lock…

Visual perceptionScrutinyActive perceptionPerceptionmedia_common.quotation_subjectPsychologyCognitive psychologymedia_common
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Orders of Consciousness and Forms of Reflexivity in Descartes

2007

ReflexivityPhilosophymedia_common.quotation_subjectSelf-awarenessSelf-consciousnessConsciousnessReflection (computer graphics)Epistemologymedia_common
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SUBJECTIVITY AS A NON-TEXTUAL STANDARD OF INTERPRETATION IN THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHICAL PSYCHOLOGY

2010

Contemporary caution against anachronism in intellectual history, and the currently momentous theoretical emphasis on subjectivity in the philosophy of mind, are two prevailing conditions that set puzzling constraints for studies in the history of philosophical psychology. The former urges against assuming ideas, motives, and concepts that are alien to the historical intellectual setting under study, and combined with the latter suggests caution in relying on our intuitions regarding subjectivity due to the historically contingent characterizations it has attained in contemporary philosophy of mind. In the face of these conditions, our paper raises a question of what we call non-textual (as…

SubjectivityPhilosophy of mindHistoryInterpretation (philosophy)06 humanities and the artsPhilosophy of psychology16. Peace & justiceIntellectual historyEpistemology060104 historyPhilosophyContemporary philosophyRational reconstruction0601 history and archaeologyAnachronismSociologyHistory and Theory
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On the Standards of Conceptual Change

2019

Abstract It is a necessary condition for recognising change that there is a yardstick against which the change can be perceived. The same applies to changes that philosophical concepts undergo. This paper delineates standards for recognising conceptual change that meet the requirements of conscientious history of philosophy. More particularly, we want to argue for the need of what we will call non-textual standards. These are features of the world of experience that must be assumed to be shared between us and the historical authors we study. While they must be used in tandem with the recognised contextual standards of conceptual change, we will argue that without recourse to at least some n…

history of philosophyHistoryHistoryAncient philosophyrealismEnvironmental ethicsrealismi (filosofia)Conceptual changehistoriaMedieval historyHistory and Philosophy of Sciencefilosofiahistorisismiconceptual changeanakronismiJournal of the Philosophy of History
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Subjectivity as a Non-Textual Standard of Interpretation in the History of Philosophical Psychology

2008

Contemporary caution against anachronism in intellectual history, and the currently mo mentous theoretical emphasis on subjectivity in the philosophy of mind, are two prevailing conditions that set puzzling constraints for studies in the history of philosophical psychol ogy. The former urges against assuming ideas, motives, and concepts that are alien to the historical intellectual setting under study, and combined with the latter suggests caution in relying on our intuitions regarding subjectivity due to the historically contingent charac terizations it has attained in contemporary philosophy of mind. In the face of these condi tions, our paper raises a question of what we call non-textual…

Philosophy of mindSubjectivityContemporary philosophyInterpretation (philosophy)PhilosophyPhilosophy of psychologyTheoretical psychology16. Peace & justiceIntellectual historyEpistemologyPhilosophical methodology
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Cudworth on Types of Consciousness

2010

PhilosophyPsychoanalysis060105 history of science technology & medicinemedia_common.quotation_subjectPhilosophy060302 philosophy0601 history and archaeology06 humanities and the artsConsciousness0603 philosophy ethics and religionConsciencemedia_commonBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy
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Early Modern Theories

2013

The notion of consciousness was used by early modern philosophers in various ways. In dualist ontologies, the nature of thought was often characterised with the help of consciousness: while matter was understood as extended in space, thought was taken to be that which is accompanied by consciousness. Whether the mind always thinks and whether mental activity in its entirety is conscious were among the questions which addressed the relation between thought and consciousness. The possibility of unconscious thought was generally overlooked. For example, Locke rejected the Cartesian tenet that we always think by appealing to particular phenomena which suggest that we do not always think, such a…

Unconscious thought theoryUnconscious mindmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences06 humanities and the artsSpace (commercial competition)050905 science studies0603 philosophy ethics and religion16. Peace & justiceMental activityEpistemology060302 philosophyPersonal identity0509 other social sciencesConsciousnessRelation (history of concept)Psychologymedia_common
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Mentaalista materiaa : tieteellinen maailmankuva, mentaalisen ja fysikaalisen suhde ja mentaalinen kausaatio John Searlen biologisessa naturalismissa

2001

tieteellinen ajattelumentaalinen kausaatiopsyykemaailmankuvakausaliteettisubjektiivisuusruumisSearle John Rmentaalisen ja fysikaalisen suhdenaturalismibiologia
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Essays on early modern conceptions of consciousness: Descartes, Cudworth, and Locke

2009

history of philosophytietoisuusLocke JohnCudworth Ralphphilosophy of mindsubjektiivisuusconsciousnessself-consciousnessmielenfilosofiasubjectivityphilosophical psychologyawarenessearly modern philosophyitsetajuntaDescartes Reneself-awarenessitsetietoisuusreflektio
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