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Oliveri, Lucia: Imaginative Animals : Leibniz's Logic of Imagination. 2021
Inhalt
9783515130516 2
9783515130516 3
9783515130516 4
9783515130516 5
INHALTSVERZEICHNIS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION: THE LOGIC OF THE IMAGINATION: SPACE, TIME, PREDICTIONS
1. THE SUBJECT MATTER OF THE IMAGINATION
2. CONTENT SUMMARY
3. METHODOLOGY
I. THE EXPRESSIVE POWER OF THE MIND AND ITS VARIETIES
1. IDEAS AS DISPOSITIONS TO FORM EXPRESSIONS
2. EXPRESSION AND ITS INTERPRETATION
3. COGNITIVE DESIDERATA FOR A THEORY OF EXPRESSION
4. EXPRESSION AND BLIND THOUGHT
5. EXPRESSION AND ITS METAPHYSICAL MEANING
6. IS COGNITIVE AND EPISTEMIC USE OF EXPRESSION UNIVOCAL?
7. CONCLUSION
II. THE GROUNDWORK OF THE IMAGINATION
1. THE SYNTHETIC WORK OF IMAGINATION
2. THE LOGIC OF THE IMAGINATION, ITS COGNITIVE CONSTRAINTS
3. SEGMENTATION AND SIMPLIFICATION
4. CONFUSED SENSATION AND DISTINGUISHED PERCEPTION
5. CONCLUSION
III. INTERLUDE: IMAGINATION AND REALITY
1. SEGMENTATION, SIMPLIFICATION, AND THE METAPHYSICAL GROUND FOR THEIR REALITY
2. SENSATIONS AS EXPRESSIONS
3. SEGMENTATION AS EXPRESSION
4. COMBINATORIC OF ELEMENTS VS PROPOSITIONAL CONTAINMENT
5. COHERENCE, MOTION, AND THE METAPHYSICAL CONSTITUTION OF BODIES
6. COHERENCE AND DISTINCT PERCEPTION
7. CONCLUSION
IV. FIRST- AND SECOND-ORDER COHERENCE I: TIME, SPACE, AND TYPES
1. WHAT ARE TYPES?
2. NATURE AS THE INTENTIONAL OBJECT OF TYPES
3. SPACE AND TIME: A FIRST-ORDER COHERENCE
4. SPACE, TIME, CAUSATION: LEIBNIZ’S EMPIRICAL PRINCIPLE
5. CONCLUSION
V. FIRST- AND SECOND-ORDER COHERENCE II: MODALITIES AND TYPES
1. FIRST-ORDER COHERENCE AND ITS LIMITS
2. FIRST-ORDER COHERENCE AND MODALITIES
3. SECOND-ORDER COHERENCE AND ITS CONSTRAINTS
4. CONCLUSION
VI. SIMILARITY, MOVEMENT, AND THE INTERIORIZATION OF TYPES
1. HOW DO WE INTERIORIZE TYPES?
2. SIMILARITY AND THE INTERIORIZATION OF TYPES
3. SIMILARITY, ABSTRACTION, AND GENERAL NOTIONS
4. SIMILARITY, ABSTRACTION, GENERAL NOTIONS IN NEW ESSAYS
5. IMAGINATION AS A COMBINATORIC FACULTY
6. CONCLUSION
VII. WHY TYPES ARE NOT CONCEPTS
1. TYPES VS. CONCEPTS – EXTENSION VS. INTENSION
2. LEIBNIZ’S CONCEPTUALISM
3. ALIA EST RERUM, ALIA TERMINORUM DIVISIO23
4. FROM TYPES TO CONCEPTS
5. TYPES, CONCEPTS, AND TERMS
6. THE CONCEPTUALIST RESPONSE
7. CONCLUSION
VIII. CONCEPTUALISM, REAL DISTINCTIONS, AND ERROR
1. GENERALIZATIONS AND NATURAL LANGUAGES
2. GENERALIZATIONS AND ESSENCES
3. LOGICAL, METAPHYSICAL, AND PHYSICAL GENUS
4. MATHEMATICAL AND PHYSICAL SPECIES
5. ON ERROR
6. CONCLUSION
IX. LEIBNIZ’S INNATISM
1. INNATE IDEAS
2. A MODERATE INNATISM
3. THE MIND AS A DARK ROOM
4. THE MIND AS AN ARCHITECT
5. TWO DESIDERATA FOR LEIBNIZ’S THEORY OF INNATE IDEAS
6. CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION: CONTOURING THE IMAGINATION
ABBREVIATION
REFERENCES
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