conteúdo não conceitual, holismo e normatividade
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ID: 211732
2004
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Abstract
A atribuição de conteúdos não conceituais serve à explicação da riqueza da experiência. No entanto, a integração de estados perceptivos, através do tempo e entre diferentes modalidades, necessários à constituição da experiência, parece dever apelar a um vocabulário conceitualista, ao qual se aplicam princípios de racionalidade. Procuro neste artigo contestar esta segunda tese: conteúdos não conceituais são parte da experiência humana, que é organizada de acordo com princípios racionais. A integração da experiência não depende de um vocabulário conceitualista, no entanto, princípios de racionalidade aplicam-se à integração própria à experiência humana. Conteúdos não conceituais são parte da experiência e a eles se aplicam princípios de racionalidade, mesmo se só podem ser atribuídos em um determinado curso de ações e identificados por meio de mecanismos demonstrativos, precisamente porque não são recrutados em conceitos.
The attribution of non-conceptual contents aims at a fine-grained description of experience. But it seems that the integration of different perceptual states, necessary to constitute the experience, demands a conceptual vocabulary, to which rational constraints apply. In this paper, I argue against this second thesis: non-conceptual contents are part of human experience, organized according to rational constraints. Integration of experience does not demand a conceptual vocabulary, although rational constraints apply to the integration of human experience. Non conceptual contents are part of human experience, and therefore are subject to rational constraints, even if they can only be attributed in a given course of actions, and identified through demonstrative devices, precisely because they are not regimented by concepts.
The attribution of non-conceptual contents aims at a fine-grained description of experience. But it seems that the integration of different perceptual states, necessary to constitute the experience, demands a conceptual vocabulary, to which rational constraints apply. In this paper, I argue against this second thesis: non-conceptual contents are part of human experience, organized according to rational constraints. Integration of experience does not demand a conceptual vocabulary, although rational constraints apply to the integration of human experience. Non conceptual contents are part of human experience, and therefore are subject to rational constraints, even if they can only be attributed in a given course of actions, and identified through demonstrative devices, precisely because they are not regimented by concepts.
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perini-santos2004kriterioncontedo
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| Authors | ;Ernesto Perini-Santos |
| Journal | international journal of applied engineering research |
| Year | 2004 |
| DOI |
10.1590/S0100-512X2004000200004
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