Ontology and Experience - Rodrigo de Arriaga and Christoph Haunold on the "Species sensibiles"

Leinsle, Ulrich G. (2016) Ontology and Experience - Rodrigo de Arriaga and Christoph Haunold on the "Species sensibiles". FILOSOFICKY CASOPIS. pp. 103-118. ISSN 0015-1831,

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Abstract

In 1645, Christoph Haunold (1610-1689), a young professor of philosophy at the University of Dillingen, harshly attacks the arguments of his Prague colleague Rodrigo de Arriaga (1592-1667) concerning the species sensibiles in his Philosophia de anima sensitiva. At least in case of the visual sense, Arriaga and Haunold agree in the assumption of species, but not in further points, namely the divisibility and the intensification of species, their visibility and function, the necessity of species for hearing, the perceptibility of the location in space through the sensus communis and the existence of species within the inner sense, which are not derived from perception. Because of its comprehensive recourse on experience and experiment, this subtle debate becomes an impressive prime example of the relation between ontology, common sense, and experimental experience.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: ; species sensibiles; optics; sound; common sense; inner sense
Subjects: 200 Religion > 200 Religion
Divisions: Catholic Theology > Entpflichtete oder im Ruhestand befindliche Professoren > Philosophisch-theologische Propädeutik - Prof. Dr. Dr. Ulrich G. Leinsle
Depositing User: Dr. Gernot Deinzer
Date Deposited: 01 Mar 2019 12:36
Last Modified: 11 Mar 2019 09:44
URI: https://pred.uni-regensburg.de/id/eprint/2254

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