Patterns of psychological thought: readings in historical and contemporary texts |
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Page 54
fundamental electrical phenomena. They tended to treat repulsion as a
secondary effect (in the seventeenth century it had been attributed to some sort of
mechanical rebounding) and also to postpone for as long as possible both
discussion ...
fundamental electrical phenomena. They tended to treat repulsion as a
secondary effect (in the seventeenth century it had been attributed to some sort of
mechanical rebounding) and also to postpone for as long as possible both
discussion ...
Page 274
It was a fundamental "law" of scholastic psychology that all appetitive functions
presuppose knowledge of the thing desired. The sense appetites are tendencies
toward concrete objects apprehended by the senses as either good or evil.
It was a fundamental "law" of scholastic psychology that all appetitive functions
presuppose knowledge of the thing desired. The sense appetites are tendencies
toward concrete objects apprehended by the senses as either good or evil.
Page 574
On the one hand, they had accepted the propositions that— 1) the fundamental
categories of conscious life do not have an a priori, spiritual character, but are the
product of historical development; and— 2) that as a function of the transition ...
On the one hand, they had accepted the propositions that— 1) the fundamental
categories of conscious life do not have an a priori, spiritual character, but are the
product of historical development; and— 2) that as a function of the transition ...
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abstract action activity alienation analysis animal appraisal Aristotle ASC's B. F. Skinner basic become behavior believe body called Cartesian dualism cause Cebes Chapt cognitive complex concept concupiscible consciousness consider contingencies Crito Descartes distinction effect emotion empiricism empiricist evolution example existence experience explanation external fact feel formal causes function fundamental historical human Hume idea identity imagination individual intellectual Intelligence intuition irascible Kant kind knowledge labour language laws logical matter means mechanistic mental mind moral movement mystical natural selection neural notion object observation ontogenic operation organism paradigm passions perception person phenomena philosophical phylogenic physical Plato Plotinus Polyclitus principle priori problem produce properties psyche psychology question reality reason relation response scientific Scientific Revolution scientists sense sensitive appetite Simmias social Socrates soul species state-specific sciences structure syllogism synthetic propositions teleological theory thing-in-itself things thought traits true unity