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タイトル: 『抽象』について
その他のタイトル: Whitehead's Lectures on “Abstraction”
著者: ホワイトヘッド, A. N.  KAKEN_name
神野, 慧一郎  KAKEN_name
著者名の別形: Whitehead, A. N
発行日: 1-Aug-1965
出版者: 京都哲學會 (京都大學文學部内)
誌名: 哲學研究
巻: 43
号: 2
開始ページ: 97
終了ページ: 122
抄録: The following statement written by Professor J. D. Goheen as a foreword to the Japanese translation of Whitehead's lectures would also be a good précis of the article. "These notes are an almost verbatim record of Whitehead's lectures in his course, Cosmologies; Ancient and Modern, on Dec. 3, 5, 8, 10, 1936. In the previous meeting of the course I had, as his assistant, given a lecture in which I asked Whitehead to make more explicit his doctrine of "vagueness". Students in the course sometimes received the impression that Whitehead disparaged clarity and advocated "vagueness" or "muddle-headedness" in philosophical thinking. Whitehead, of course, intended nothing of the kind, but he was profoundly interested in the relation of abstract thought to the "penumbral" background of experience. From one point of view, Whitehead's metaphysics could be construed as essentially concerned with this relation. The world of "process", which Whitehead thought of as initially disclosed in experience, is a world in which everything is related to everything else. Finite "facts", as well as finite truths or abstractions have, therefore, to be accounted for against a background of reality and experience which is unbounded. An abstraction or finite truth is, in this sense, arbitrary; there are always others in the background which might be expressed, but are, for good reasons or bad, suppressed."
DOI: 10.14989/JPS_43_02_97
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2433/273317
出現コレクション:第43卷第2册 (第496號)

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