6533b86ffe1ef96bd12cdf91

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Perceptual Self-Awareness in Seneca, Augustine, and Olivi

Juhana Toivanen

subject

history of philosophymedia_common.quotation_subjecthavaintoruumisperception0603 philosophy ethics and religionfilosofian historiaPeter OliviStoicismArgumentPerceptionfilosofiaPetrus Olivi0601 history and archaeologyitsetajuntaitsetietoisuusmedia_common060103 classicsAugustinusAugustinePhilosophy06 humanities and the artsPhilosophy of psychology16. Peace & justiceSenecaEpistemologyPhilosophyIrrational number060302 philosophySelf-awarenessSoulAttribution

description

This article traces the philosophical idea of self-perception from the times of ancient Stoicism to the thirteenth century by analyzing the views of Seneca, Augustine, and Olivi. The central argument is that they defend the same idea according to which self-preservation and the appropriate use of one’s body requires awareness thereof, despite the obvious contextual differences and the uncertainty of direct historical connections between the authors. They think that this kind of self-awareness does not belong only to human beings, because irrational animals need to perceive their bodies, the functions of their bodily parts, and to perceive themselves as living beings in order to act appropriately and survive. The attribution of self-perception to animals is based on a distinction between the experiential awareness of the soul and the intellectual understanding of its essence, a distinction postulated by all three authors. The philosophical affinities between their views show that ideas that originate in Stoic thought were transmitted, directly or indirectly, to medieval philosophical psychology. peerReviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201601201181