145066

(1970) Man and World 3 (2).

The knower and the known

Guttorm Fløistad

pp. 3-25

This paper is a presentation and discussion of Spinoza's view on the knower, or the mind, as an agent. The knower is on his view to be regarded as an active or generative complex cognitive experience. Imagination, reason and intuition are the cognitive principles. On account of their intrinsic relation to "the first law of nature", that of selfpreservation, together with the thesis of the mind as constituted by ideas or knowledge, these principles function at the same time as moral principles. Consequently, it makes sense to speak of an individual's moral attitude toward everything be knows. A discussion of imagination, reason and intuition mainly as cognitive principles is followed by some concluding remarks on the cognitive and moral relation between human beings: To know another human being is to know his knowledge. The moral attitude of individuals to each other is a function of their mutual knowledge of knowledge.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/BF01596608

Full citation:

Fløistad, G. (1970). Review of The knower and the known. Man and World 3 (2), pp. 3-25.

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