Homo Bioelektromimeticus. System pojęć i hipotez modelowych
Ładowanie...
Data
2013
Autorzy
Tytuł czasopisma
ISSN czasopisma
Tytuł tomu
Wydawca
Gdańskie Seminarium Duchowne
Abstrakt
Artykuł stawia sobie za cel odpowiedź na pytanie, od którego powinien zaczynać się każdy traktat z dziedziny nauk społecznych: kim jest człowiek? Droga do uzyskania odpowiedzi wiedzie dwutorowo: poprzez wykorzystanie perspektywy biofizycznej i antropologicznej. „Dramat” ludzkiego życia naświetlony został bowiem dzięki metodzie mimetycznej René Girarda, a także bioelektronicznej teorii autorstwa ks. Włodzimierza Sedlaka. Niniejszy tekst jest klasyczną rozprawą teoretyczną, której efektem jest system pojęć i hipotez modelowych, opisujących zależności między poszczególnymi elementami. Ogólna hipoteza zawarta w artykule brzmi następująco: człowiek jest istotą bioelektromimetyczną. Hipoteza ta posłużyła autorowi jako przesłanka m.in. do rozważań nad implikacjami dla ładu społecznego.
The aim of this work is to answer the question which should begin every treaty in the social sciences: Who is a man? The author has used two perspectives: biophysical and anthropological. Because the area of research was studied by two “spotlights”: bioelectronic and mimetic. The first method was created by Włodzimierz Sedlak, a Polish scientist from Catholic University in Lublin, a physicist, an expert in research about light and its connection with human life, creator of Polish Bioelectronic School. The second method was started to exist thanks to the French anthropologist René Girard. This text is a classic theoretical treatise. Its result is a system of concepts and model hypotheses describing the relationship between the individual elements. The main hypothesis is simple: the man is bioelectromimeticus person whose life connected with spirit light and material light, and last but not least, with mimetic nature. Wrong mimicking is – generally speaking – the fact which explains why human beings could use violence, how they could dispose of light and how they could walk away from God- Light to non-existence (term from St. Thomas’s philosophy). The hypothesis was made as a helpful factor to consider – among other things – social order.
The aim of this work is to answer the question which should begin every treaty in the social sciences: Who is a man? The author has used two perspectives: biophysical and anthropological. Because the area of research was studied by two “spotlights”: bioelectronic and mimetic. The first method was created by Włodzimierz Sedlak, a Polish scientist from Catholic University in Lublin, a physicist, an expert in research about light and its connection with human life, creator of Polish Bioelectronic School. The second method was started to exist thanks to the French anthropologist René Girard. This text is a classic theoretical treatise. Its result is a system of concepts and model hypotheses describing the relationship between the individual elements. The main hypothesis is simple: the man is bioelectromimeticus person whose life connected with spirit light and material light, and last but not least, with mimetic nature. Wrong mimicking is – generally speaking – the fact which explains why human beings could use violence, how they could dispose of light and how they could walk away from God- Light to non-existence (term from St. Thomas’s philosophy). The hypothesis was made as a helpful factor to consider – among other things – social order.
Opis
Zawiera schematy.
Słowa kluczowe
bioelektronika, Jezus Chrystus, homogenizacja, kozioł ofiarny, mechanizm kozła ofiarnego, ład społeczny, mimetyzm, Włodzimierz Sedlak, światło, życie, społeczeństwo, bioelectronics, Jesus Christ, homogenization, life, light, mimetism, scapegoat, scapegoat mechanism, social order, society
Cytowanie
Studia Gdańskie, 2013, T. 32, s. 39-55.
Kolekcje
Licencja
CC-BY-ND - Uznanie autorstwa - Bez utworów zależnych