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John Locke

Philosophy 29 (111):377-378 (1954)

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  1. Representationalism and the linguistic question in early modern philosophy.Dachun Yang - 2008 - Frontiers of Philosophy in China 3 (4):595-606.
    The view of language is greatly changed from early modern philosophy to later modern philosophy and to postmodern philosophy. The linguistic question in early modern philosophy, which is characterized by rationalism and empiricism, is discussed in this paper. Linguistic phenomena are not at the center of philosophical reflections in early modern philosophy. The subject of consciousness is at the center of the philosophy, which makes language serve purely as an instrument for representing thoughts. Locke, Leibniz and Descartes consider language from (...)
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  • Did Locke Hold the Representative Theory of Perception?Dipanwita Chakrabarti - 2018 - Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 35 (1):61-75.
    Locke’s equivocal usage of the term ‘idea’ in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding has led to different interpretations of his theory of perception regarding the external world. First, the traditional and orthodox philosophers have interpreted the term ‘idea’ as a mental entity of a specific kind, i.e. a mental image, locked up inside the mind. This is referred to as the crude form of representationalism. Secondly, Woozley has pointed out that the word ‘idea’ can be interpreted as ‘meaning of words’, (...)
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  • Lockean fluids.Michael Jacovides - 2008 - In Paul Hoffman, David Owen & Gideon Yaffe (eds.), Contemporary Perspectives on Early Modern Philosophy: Essays in Honor of Vere Chappell. Broadview Press.
    Robert Boyle showed that air “has a Spring that enables it to sustain or resist a pressure” and also it has “an active Spring . . . as when it distends a flaccid or breaks a full-blown Bladder in our exhausted receiver” (Boyle 1999, 6.41-42).1 In this respect, he distinguished between air and other fluids, since liquids such as water are “not sensibly compressible by an ordinary force” (ibid., 5.264). He explained the air’s tendency to resist and to expand by (...)
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