The world as active power : studies in the history of European reason
Pietarinen, Juhani | Viljanen, Valtteri 2009 Brill eBook titles 2008 ( Serie ) Leiden ; Boston : Brill 9789047430568 | BRILL9789047430568 AbstractWhat is the ultimate explanatory factor for the existence of the world, for all its changing phenomena and the enduring order found in it? In the history of Western thought, we can find a longstanding philosophical tendency to answer this question in terms of power: the universe is understood as an ordered whole produced by a rational power, that is, by the power of reason. That power is thought to be active in the sense of being capable of existing and acting ‘in itself’ as an infinite, eternal, and unchangeable cause of the world. The essays in this collection discuss the idea of active power in the world-explanations of Plato, the Stoics, Neoplatonism, early and late medieval scholasticism, Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Kant, Hegel, and Schopenhauer.
SchlagwörterMedicine, Greek and Roman