Disembodied Cognition and Assimilation: Thirteenth-Century Debates on an Epistemological Puzzle

IF 0.2 1区 哲学 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
D. Perler
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Medieval Aristotelians assumed that we cannot assimilate forms unless our soul abstracts them from sensory images. But what about the disembodied soul that has no senses and hence no sensory images? How can it assimilate forms? This article discusses this problem, focusing on two thirteenth-century models. It first looks at Thomas Aquinas’ model, which invokes divine intervention: the separated soul receives forms directly from God. The article examines the problems this explanatory model poses and then turns to a second model, defended by Matthew of Aquasparta: the separated soul actively apprehends forms that are present to it. It will be argued that this model explains assimilation in terms of appropriation, rather than reception, of forms and thereby radically changes the traditional account of cognition. Finally, the article draws some methodological conclusions, arguing that the focus on the ‘limit case’ of separated souls made theoretical change possible.
异化认知与同化:13世纪关于认识论困惑的争论
中世纪亚里士多德认为,除非我们的灵魂将形式从感官图像中抽象出来,否则我们无法同化形式。但是,没有感官,因此没有感官图像的无实体灵魂呢?它如何吸收形式?本文讨论了这个问题,重点讨论了两个十三世纪的模型。它首先着眼于托马斯·阿奎那的模型,该模型调用了神的干预:分离的灵魂直接从神那里接受形式。这篇文章考察了这个解释模型提出的问题,然后转向第二个模型,由Aquaspata的Matthew辩护:分离的灵魂积极地理解存在于它身上的形式。有人认为,这个模型从形式的挪用而不是接受的角度来解释同化,从而从根本上改变了传统的认知解释。最后,文章得出了一些方法论结论,认为关注灵魂分离的“极限案例”使理论变革成为可能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.00
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