Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self
Empirically minded and naturalistically inclined post-Cartesian philosophers have refused to accept the idea that we human persons are immaterial, senseless souls. This rejection has led to a fragmentation of the self and eventually to its theoretical disappearence. A way to resist this eliminativi...
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Rosenberg & Sellier
2016
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oai:doaj.org-article:115d0288a2af4cbca01ce1f284c7153a2021-12-02T09:51:20ZSense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self10.13128/Phe_Mi-196012280-78532239-4028https://doaj.org/article/115d0288a2af4cbca01ce1f284c7153a2016-11-01T00:00:00Zhttps://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/pam/article/view/7120https://doaj.org/toc/2280-7853https://doaj.org/toc/2239-4028 Empirically minded and naturalistically inclined post-Cartesian philosophers have refused to accept the idea that we human persons are immaterial, senseless souls. This rejection has led to a fragmentation of the self and eventually to its theoretical disappearence. A way to resist this eliminativist trend is to see the self as an embodied entity, a promising thesis which has assumed prominence in contemporary debates. The paper is a (fairly partisan) reconstruction of this post-Cartesian scenario. Alfredo TomasettaRosenberg & SellierarticlebodysoulpersonAestheticsBH1-301EthicsBJ1-1725ENFRITPhenomenology and Mind, Iss 4 (2016) |
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EN FR IT |
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body soul person Aesthetics BH1-301 Ethics BJ1-1725 |
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body soul person Aesthetics BH1-301 Ethics BJ1-1725 Alfredo Tomasetta Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self |
description |
Empirically minded and naturalistically inclined post-Cartesian philosophers have refused to accept the idea that we human persons are immaterial, senseless souls. This rejection has led to a fragmentation of the self and eventually to its theoretical disappearence. A way to resist this eliminativist trend is to see the self as an embodied entity, a promising thesis which has assumed prominence in contemporary debates. The paper is a (fairly partisan) reconstruction of this post-Cartesian scenario.
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format |
article |
author |
Alfredo Tomasetta |
author_facet |
Alfredo Tomasetta |
author_sort |
Alfredo Tomasetta |
title |
Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self |
title_short |
Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self |
title_full |
Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self |
title_fullStr |
Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sense and Subjectivity. A Very short - and Partial - History of the Loss and Recovery of the Bodily Self |
title_sort |
sense and subjectivity. a very short - and partial - history of the loss and recovery of the bodily self |
publisher |
Rosenberg & Sellier |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/115d0288a2af4cbca01ce1f284c7153a |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT alfredotomasetta senseandsubjectivityaveryshortandpartialhistoryofthelossandrecoveryofthebodilyself |
_version_ |
1718397988220436480 |