The Concept of ConsciousnessCosimo, Inc., 01/11/2005 - 364 من الصفحات The present volume does not aim to be a system. It does profess not to forget the initial quest of philosophy.Its scope is limited, for it proposed only to give a consistent account, a definition, of one very common yet perplexing feature of the universe - consciousness" -from The Preface By 1914, when he completed The Concept of Consciousness, Holt believed that objects are as initially perceived, that one could relate conscious experience to physical references and that environment is the determining force in life. Contents of this volume include: .The Renaissance of Logic .Objections to the Programme of Logic .Correspondence: The Particular and The Universal .Further Implications of the Programme of Logic .Our Universe at Large .The Substance of Ideas .The Substance of Matter .The Neutral Mosaic .The Concept of Consciousness EDWIN B. HOLT, (1873-1946) born in Winchester, Massachusetts, was an undergraduate at Amherst College, but transferred to Harvard, receiving his A.B. in 1896. Thereafter, he studied with William James, receiving a doctorate in psychology in 1901. Holt taught at Harvard until 1918, and later served for nearly a decade as a Visiting Professor of Psychology at Princeton, where he was widely acclaimed for his brilliant lectures. |
المحتوى
CONTENTS | 13 |
CHAPTER II | 19 |
CHAPTER III | 37 |
CHAPTER IV | 53 |
CHAPTER V | 77 |
CHAPTER VI | 91 |
CHAPTER VII | 115 |
CHAPTER VIII | 135 |
THE EMPIRICAL PROPERTIES OF CONSCIOUSNESS | 185 |
CHAPTER XI | 208 |
CHAPTER XII | 223 |
CHAPTER XIII | 259 |
CHAPTER XIV | 282 |
CHAPTER XV | 305 |
341 | |
CHAPTER IX | 166 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
absolute action-theory activity asserted Berkeley called cerebrum chapter co-ordination coherent colours concepts concrete consciousness consistent contradiction contradictory correspondence course cross-section deductive system defined definition Democritus distinct drainage-theory dualistic elements empirical energy epistemology error experience fact fundamental H. H. Joachim idea idealism instance introspection involved Joachim judgement knowledge system knowledge-mass laws least logical logician manifold masses mathematical matter McDougall means mental merely mind monism motion Münsterberg nature nervous system neutral entities neutral realm one's particular person philosophy physical objects physiological physiological psychology position postulates precisely predicate present principle psychic psychology purely purpose reflection reflex relations representative theory Russell means sciousness secondary qualities seems sensation and perception sense space spatial subjective subjective idealism substance symbolic synapses system of terms temporal theory of knowledge things thought tion true truth unity universal predicate universe universe of discourse vis viva volition whole