A semantic shift of the word consciousness (conscientia, conscience, Gewissen, Bewusstsein, coscienza) occurred in 17th and 18th-century European langauges. While in pre-modern times the term Consciousness had been related to theology and ethics, in early modern thought, a new meaning was added to the term, somehow different from the original one. Consciousness has been used to refer to the knowledge of Self. In addition, it is apparent that the syntagms relating to the word Consciousness, as, for instance, freedom of consciousness, casus concientiae became more frequent in political, religious, scientific and philosophical texts. My contribution will analyse the occurrences of this word family in a date-base of about one hundred philosphical and scientific texts and will examine their specific uses and contexts.
Theories of consciousness in early-modern philosophy
Roberto Palaia
2012
Abstract
A semantic shift of the word consciousness (conscientia, conscience, Gewissen, Bewusstsein, coscienza) occurred in 17th and 18th-century European langauges. While in pre-modern times the term Consciousness had been related to theology and ethics, in early modern thought, a new meaning was added to the term, somehow different from the original one. Consciousness has been used to refer to the knowledge of Self. In addition, it is apparent that the syntagms relating to the word Consciousness, as, for instance, freedom of consciousness, casus concientiae became more frequent in political, religious, scientific and philosophical texts. My contribution will analyse the occurrences of this word family in a date-base of about one hundred philosphical and scientific texts and will examine their specific uses and contexts.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


