Both Plato and Aristotle distinguish different kinds not only of rationality, but of irrationality as well. The paper focusses on the milder form of irrationality, that can somehow interact with rationality. The scheme of such interaction follows archaic mathematical patterns, which suggest how rationality can relate to irrationality inside and outside us.
Cattanei, E., Emozioni, affetti e sentimenti nel pensiero antico: il loro carattere “a-logico”, in F. Camera, E. C. E. S. (ed.), Emozioni, affetti, sentimenti: tra natura e libertà, Mimesis Edizioni, Milano-Udine 2020: <<VARCHI>>, 5 11- 46 [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/230637]
Emozioni, affetti e sentimenti nel pensiero antico: il loro carattere “a-logico”
Cattanei, Elisabetta
2020
Abstract
Both Plato and Aristotle distinguish different kinds not only of rationality, but of irrationality as well. The paper focusses on the milder form of irrationality, that can somehow interact with rationality. The scheme of such interaction follows archaic mathematical patterns, which suggest how rationality can relate to irrationality inside and outside us.File in questo prodotto:
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