scholarly journals The Early Breakdown of the Modern Anthropos?: The Evil Demon and the Little Automaton Francine as Cartesian Cogito´s Wounds. Pos-thuman Speculations in Andres Vaccari´s La pasión de Descartes

2020 ◽  
Vol 22 ◽  
pp. 161
Author(s):  
Belisario Zalazar
Keyword(s):  
Synthese ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 195 (11) ◽  
pp. 4703-4731 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Baptiste Guillon
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 208-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adam Leite

Penelope Maddy claims that we can have no evidence that we are not being globally deceived by an evil demon. However, Maddy’s Plain Inquirer holds that she has good evidence for a wide variety of claims about the world and her relation to it. She rejects the broadly Cartesian idea that she can’t be entitled to these claims, or have good evidence for them, or know them, unless she can provide a defense of them that starts from nowhere. She likewise rejects the more limited demand for a defense that makes use only of considerations that do not concern the world outside of her mind. She allows that some considerations about the world can be appealed to perfectly appropriately as fully adequate evidence in favor of other considerations about the world. So why can’t the Plain Inquirer rule out global skeptical hypotheses by producing evidence against them that depends upon other considerations about the world? Is there good reason for singling out global skeptical hypotheses such as I am not being deceived by an evil demon as requiring a different kind of treatment? Considerations about epistemic asymmetry and epistemic circularity, as well as Wittgensteinian considerations about the relation between evidence and the real-world and human background context, all lead to the conclusion that there is not.


2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 31-41
Author(s):  
Tamás Pavlovits

I will analyse Descartes? role in the ?theological turn? of French phenomenology. Although in Husserl?s phenomenology the Cartesian cogito was the central element, in the phenomenologists of the ?theological turn? (Janicaud) it was exchanged for the idea of the infinite. I examine why Marion and L?vinas are interested in the Cartesian idea of the infinite. In the phenomenology of Marion this idea is interpreted as a ?conceptual icon? and a ?saturated phenomenon? ,in the phenomenology of L?vinas this idea represents the structure that provides the possibility of the phenomenological description of transcendence. In order to see if Marion and L?vinas turn back to the onto-theological tradition of the metaphysics, like Janicaud affirms, we have to see how Descartes describes 31 the idea of infinite and how Marion and L?vinas interpret it.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrícia Oliveira de Freitas

Este artigo de natureza qualitativa tem como objetivo delinear a concepção de sujeito proposta pela Linguística Cognitiva, tendo em vista que a noção de subjetividade, para o constructo teórico em questão, nem sempre é explícita. Para levar a cabo tal empreitada, este estudo fundamenta-se no pressuposto de que, para se estudar a mente humana, não se deve excluir o corpo do processo analítico (LAKOFF; JOHNSON, 1980; LAKOFF, 1987; JOHNSON, 1987). Assim sendo, acredita-se que a inserção da encarnação física humana no quadro teórico da razão, isto é, a teorização da promoção do corpo ao mesmo patamar ocupado pela mente, sem a possibilidade de dissociação entre eles, seja o fator crucial para se alcançar uma definição possível do que se trata o sujeito para a Linguística Cognitiva. Com o intuito de suscitar tal discussão, resgatam-se, inicialmente, as questões relacionadas ao sujeito engendrado no século XVII, influenciado por René Descartes com a intuição intelectual do cogito, no advento da Filosofia Moderna: o sujeito gerido pela substancialidade, universalidade e consciência. Como contraponto ao sujeito cartesiano, discute-se o paradigma filosófico da Hipótese da Corporificação, tornando possível o debate sobre o inconsciente cognitivo, a mente corporificada e o pensamento metafórico. Desse modo, pretende-se lançar mão do conceito de consciência, bem como os dualismos sobre mente/corpo, interioridade/exterioridade, racionalismo/empirismo e universalismo/relativismo.


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