Descripción
The noted French Enlightenment philosopher's treatise explores "how nature teaches man to think and analyze, how ideas and faculties of the soul come into being, and how language develops and makes systematic analytical methods possible."*** Benjamin Franklin had a copy of this book in his library.***[4](title, blank, table, vi), 153, [3]p.(last page blank)***Contemporary speckled sheepskin with decorative spine gilt, red stained edges, and marbled endpapers spine head chipped, corners bumped and a bit worn, small wormholes on the front cover and first third of fore-edge, small chip on the rear cover. Internally quite clean and withal a Very Good, beautiful copy of a scarce book only two appearances at auction in the last 30 years.***** Although posterity has not hoisted him to the same level as other thinkers of the Enlightenment, Condillac asserts himself as one of the most penetrating psychologists of his century. With Voltaire, he represents one of the main introducers in France of the principles of the English philosopher John Locke, whom he develops in a systematic way. (Joode) Étienne Bonnot, Abbé de Condillac, was the chief exponent of a radically empiricist account of the workings of the mind that has since come to be referred to as sensationism. Whereas John Locke s empiricism followed upon a rejection of innate principles and innate ideas, Condillac went further and rejected innate abilities as well. On his version of empiricism, experience not only provides us with ideas or the raw materials for knowledge, it also teaches us how to focus attention, remember, imagine, abstract, judge, and reason. It forms our desires and teaches us what to will. Moreover, it provides us with the best lessons in the performance of these operations, so that a study of how we originally learn to perform them also tells us how those operations ought to be performed. The pursuit of this tenet led Condillac to articulate an early developmental psychology, with explicit pedagogical and methodological implications. His concerns also led him to focus on the theory of perception, and to advance important and original views on our perception of spatial form. He offered a more searching, careful, and precise account of what exactly is given to us by each of the sense organs than any that had been offered up to his day, and presented a highly nuanced account of how this raw data is worked up into our beliefs about the world around us. (Stanford)***Please email us for better pricing.***. N° de ref. del artículo ABE-1523745838238
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