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4 - Cognition, Knowledge, and the Theory of Signs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2009

Antonia LoLordo
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
Antonia Lolordo
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor Corcoran Department of Philosophy, University of Virginia
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Summary

Gassendi is an empiricist of a more radical form than his scholastic predecessors. In the tradition he was most familiar with, the process of abstracting from sensible species to intellectual species was often held to add new content: the essence, which is not contained within the sensible species. Gassendi, like other early moderns, keeps the term “abstraction, ” but for him abstraction is a process of cutting away content rather than creating new content. Hence it cannot enable us to grasp mind-independent universals or essences.

Gassendi enshrines the claims that all ideas originate from sense and that all content is acquired through sense in the fifth canon of his reconstructed Epicurean logic:

Canon V: Everything that is an anticipation or praenotion [that is, idea] in the mind depends on sensations, either by incursion or proportion or similitude. (1.54b)

There are no ideas innate in us, merely an “innate faculty of knowing” that allows us to acquire ideas through the senses and then construct new ideas from them (3.379a). Most of Gassendi's logic is devoted to explaining how this innate faculty of knowing constructs adequate ideas of things we do not sense on the basis of what's acquired through the senses. But as well as providing this account of simple apprehension, Gassendian logic also includes judgment or proposition, by which ideas are combined into sentential complexes, and reasoning.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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