Volume 4, Issue 3 (2024)                   jpt 2024, 4(3): 0-0 | Back to browse issues page

XML Persian Abstract Print


Download citation:
BibTeX | RIS | EndNote | Medlars | ProCite | Reference Manager | RefWorks
Send citation to:

seifollahifard E. Embodied Cognition from Ibn Sina's point of view. jpt 2024; 4 (3)
URL: http://jpt.modares.ac.ir/article-34-76328-en.html
, e.seifollahifard@gmail.com
Abstract:   (132 Views)
From Islamic Philosophers' Perspective, particularly the Peripatetics, cognition is considered an act of the soul rather than the body. Contrary to the conventional philosophical approach that regards cognition as separate from the body, this article employs an analytical-descriptive methodology to examine the possibility and mechanism of bodily influence on cognition within the framework of Avicenna's philosophical and medical doctrines. Despite Avicenna's dualistic stance on the non-identity of soul and body, and his designation of the soul as the primary agent of cognition, his perspective on the soul-body relationship suggests a definition of embodied cognition wherein differences or changes in bodies across all levels of perception lead to alterations in the soul and, consequently, variations in their cognition of a single known object. Nevertheless, embodied cognition in the Avicennian system maintains a profound distinction from physicalism: the soul remains the fundamental principle in the emergence of cognition.

Keywords: 1. Avicenna (Ibn Sina), 2. Soul, 3. Body, 4. Embodied Cognition
     
Article Type: Original Research | Subject: Epistemology (Islamic)
Received: 2024/07/30 | Accepted: 2024/10/20 | Published: 2024/10/31

Add your comments about this article : Your username or Email:
CAPTCHA

Send email to the article author


Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.