Emotion and Cognitive Life in Medieval and Early Modern Philosophy

Voorkant
Martin Pickavé, Lisa Shapiro
OUP Oxford, 4 okt 2012 - 285 pagina's
This volume offers a much needed shift of focus in the study of emotion in the history of philosophy. Discussion has tended to focus on the moral relevance of emotions, and (except in ancient philosophy) the role of emotions in cognitive life has received little attention. Thirteen new essays investigate the continuities between medieval and early modern thinking about the emotions, and open up a contemporary debate on the relationship between emotions, cognition, and reason, and the way emotions figure in our own cognitive lives. A team of leading philosophers of the medieval, renaissance, and early modern periods explore these ideas from the point of view of four key themes: the situation of emotions within the human mind; the intentionality of emotions and their role in cognition; emotions and action; the role of emotion in self-understanding and the social situation of individuals.
 

Inhoudsopgave

Introduction
1
Dispassionate Passions
9
Why is the Sheep Afraid of the Wolf? Medieval Debates on Animal Passions
32
John Duns Scotus on the Passions of the Will
53
Intellections and Volitions in Ockhams Nominalism
75
The Case of Adam Wodeham
94
SixteenthCentury Discussions of the Passions of the Will
116
Renaissance Debates on Platonic Eros
133
Reasons Causes and Inclinations
156
Using the Passions
176
Passionate Perception in Descartes and Spinoza
193
Agency and Attention in Malebranches Theory of Cognition
217
The Case of Pride
234
Sympathy Comparison and the Proliferation of the Passions in Hume and his Predecessors
255
Index
279
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