
Contents
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I: The Soul in Natural Philosophy I: The Soul in Natural Philosophy
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II: The Soul and Life II: The Soul and Life
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III: The Soul and the Mind III: The Soul and the Mind
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IV: Human Nature without a Soul IV: Human Nature without a Soul
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References References
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6 The Soul
Get accessRichard Serjeantson teaches the history of philosophy and the sciences at Trinity College, Cambridge. He has published on a variety of seventeenth-century topics and authors, including Francis Bacon, Edward Herbert, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke, and is currently working on a newly discovered early draft of René Descartes’ Regulae ad directionem ingenii.
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Published:02 May 2011
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Abstract
This article looks at the vigorous questioning of the immortality of the soul during the early modern period. It offers an account of some significant aspects of the philosophy of the soul in the early modern period and of its transformation across that period. It proposes a thesis about the place of the soul in early modern conceptions of what it meant to be a human animal and traces the contribution of the early modern philosophy of the soul to the enlightened science of human nature.
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