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Nov 18, 1997 · What is mental imagery? 1.1 Mental imagery in the empirical sciences. 1.2 Mental imagery vs. images. 1.3 Mental imagery vs. imagination. 1.4 The content of mental imagery. 1.5 The format of mental imagery. 2. Mental imagery in perception. 2.1 Amodal completion. 2.2 Multimodal mental imagery. 2.3 Unusual forms of mental imagery in perception.
- Mental Representation
The notion of a “mental representation” is, arguably, in the...
- Imagination
Acknowledgments. No one can have an encyclopedic knowledge...
- Memory
Bibliography. Further reading in philosophy: Bernecker &...
- Desire
Within moral psychology, desire features prominently in a...
- The Contents of Perception
Beliefs are often thought to be relations to contents, and...
- Emotion
Acknowledgments. We want to thank Manula Adhihetty for his...
- Mental Representation
Searches related to what are platonic graphs in psychology
Jan 11, 2000 · In comparison with the modern discipline of Psychology, then, Aristotle’s psychology is broad in scope. He even devotes attention to the question of the nature of life itself, a subject which falls outside the purview of psychology in most contemporary contexts.
In the broadest terms, the dialogues address four core problems: the problem of the knowable (ontology and metaphysics); the problem of knowledge (epistemology and psychology); the problem of conduct (ethics); and the problem of governance (political and social science).
Aug 28, 2001 · This entry outlines the overall directions of this new research area and focuses on the logical status of diagrams in proofs, their representational function and adequacy, different kinds of diagrammatic systems, and the role of diagrams in human cognition. 1. Introduction. 2. Diagrams as Representational Systems.
Platonic graphs: these are the graphs formed by the vertices and edges of the Platonic solids—the polyhedra in which all the faces are identical regular polygons and where the arrangement of polygons at each vertex is the same.
The clearest statement of Plato's psy chology was in his theory of the tri partite soul which he developed from the idea of three life styles of Pythagoras. These were 1) Philosopher whose goal was wis dom 2) Man of action whose goal was dis tinction 3) Votary of enjoyment whose goal was the gratification of appetite. It requires a ...
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This edited volume explores the burgeoning fields of Platonic ontology and psychology, discussing topics such as the relationship between mind, soul and emotions, as well as the connection between ontology and ethics in Plato’s middle and late dialogues.