Osoba a umysł

Ładowanie...
Miniatura

Data

1992

Tytuł czasopisma

ISSN czasopisma

Tytuł tomu

Wydawca

Wydawnictwo Towarzystwa Naukowego Katolickiego Uniwersytetu Lubelskiego

Abstrakt

The mind in the Greco-Latin tradition has been called by various terms: intellectus (nous, ennoia, dianoia, synnoia, noema, noesis, synesis), ratio (logos, logismos, syllogismos, logistikon), animus, anima, mens, (psyche, phren, phronema, phronesis, thymos, pneuma), conscientia (syneidesis, syneidos), sensus (aisthesis) and others. In the philosophical and theological tradition it was understood in a reistic manner, regardless of a close relation to the person. However, it must be taken as being absolutely incorporated in the person, and as incomprehensible without the person. One has to assume a kind of Chalcedonism here: psychical, empirical and material “nature” is translated into spiritual, transempiricial “nature” – and vice versa – in the person. The mind can exist act and only in the person as absolutizing subsistence, and above all in the man as a common dome for the corporal and spiritual sphere.

Opis

Tłumaczenie streszczenia / Translated by Jan Kłos.

Słowa kluczowe

osoba, umysł, intelekt, rozum, intuicja, świadomość, rozsądek, pierwiastek duchowy, natura umysłu, funkcje umysłu, poznanie, komunikacja, wiedza, psyche, person, mind, intellect, reason, intuition, awareness, spiritual element, nature of mind, functions of mind, cognition, communication, knowledge, psychika

Cytowanie

Roczniki Teologiczne, 1991-1992, T. 38-39, z. 2, s. 5-20.

Licencja

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Poland