Innate potentialities require experience to become knowledge: How the notion of innatism can work? - Alexander Borodin - 書籍 - Grin Publishing - 9783656263685 - 2012年8月25日
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Innate potentialities require experience to become knowledge: How the notion of innatism can work?

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発送予定日 2026年1月8日 - 2026年1月19日
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Scholarly Research Paper from the year 2012 in the subject Philosophy - Theoretical (Realisation, Science, Logic, Language), grade: 69, University of Essex (Department of Philosophy), language: English, abstract: Does our notion of knowledge necessitate that it becomes manifest firstly in our thinking and then in our actions or can it on the contrary exist in a latent, hidden way within us and still be considered knowledge? Given the exceeding ambiguity behind the term knowledge we will need in the first place a clear definition of knowledge that should in turn enable us to bring focus to our investigation on the whole. In the course of this work, we will take a look at the main arguments Plato and Leibniz put forward in this regard, particularly focusing on their varying concept of innate knowledge and its relation to experience and our capacity to reason. In what will follow, I shall argue that even if we are able to identify certain instances of pre- existing knowledge or understanding, it will anyway remain inextricably connected to the experiences we make in our environment. Thereby, there must be a coincidence of innate capacities and certain, outer circumstances for knowledge to emerge and become visible. Otherwise, the presence of knowledge isn't at any rate recognizable in the real world, but exists in an inactivated, hidden mode without the respective person even becoming conscious of its existence.


16 pages

メディア 書籍     Paperback Book   (ソフトカバーで背表紙を接着した本)
リリース済み 2012年8月25日
ISBN13 9783656263685
出版社 Grin Publishing
ページ数 16
寸法 178 × 254 × 1 mm   ·   40 g
言語 ドイツ語  

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