Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Conatus> ?p ?o }
- Conatus abstract "In early philosophies of psychology and metaphysics, conatus (/koʊˈneɪtəs/; Latin for \"effort; endeavor; impulse, inclination, tendency; undertaking; striving\") is an innate inclination of a thing to continue to exist and enhance itself. This \"thing\" may be mind, matter or a combination of both. Over the millennia, many different definitions and treatments have been formulated. Seventeenth-century philosophers René Descartes, Baruch Spinoza, Gottfried Leibniz, and Thomas Hobbes made important contributions. The conatus may refer to the instinctive \"will to live\" of living organisms or to various metaphysical theories of motion and inertia. Often the concept is associated with God's will in a pantheist view of Nature. The concept may be broken up into separate definitions for the mind and body and split when discussing centrifugal force and inertia.The history of the term conatus is that of a series of subtle tweaks in meaning and clarifications of scope developed over the course of two and a half millennia. Successive philosophers to adopt the term put their own personal twist on the concept, each developing the term differently such that it now has no accepted definition. The earliest authors to discuss conatus wrote primarily in Latin, basing their usage on ancient Greek concepts. These thinkers therefore used \"conatus\" not only as a technical term but as a common word and in a general sense. In archaic texts, the more technical usage is difficult to discern from the more common one, and they are also hard to differentiate in translation. In English translations, the term is italicized when used in the technical sense or translated and followed by conatus in brackets. Today, conatus is rarely used in the technical sense, since modern physics uses concepts such as inertia and conservation of momentum that have superseded it. It has, however, been a notable influence on nineteenth- and twentieth-century thinkers such as Arthur Schopenhauer, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Louis Dumont.".
- Conatus thumbnail CiceroBust.jpg?width=300.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink durants.htm.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink LD3Hobbes.html.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink spinoza-psychological.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink ModePiet.htm.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink page.149.php.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink spinoza.htm.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink ?id=6r0YAAAAMAAJ.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink ?id=7a8K-nSGe7QC.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink ?id=MTUAAAAAMAAJ.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink ?id=UDmKMY08pcEC&printsec=toc.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink index.php?option=com_docman&task=doc_view&gid=47&Itemid=45.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink 000337999296328.
- Conatus wikiPageExternalLink Hobbesian%20Mechanics.pdf.
- Conatus wikiPageID "6273584".
- Conatus wikiPageLength "50397".
- Conatus wikiPageOutDegree "158".
- Conatus wikiPageRevisionID "701223452".
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Aether_(classical_element).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Affect_(psychology).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Agency_(sociology).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Alhazen.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Anthropomorphism.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Antonio_Damasio.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Schopenhauer.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Atom.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Augustine_of_Hippo.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Autopoiesis.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Averroes.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Avicenna.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Baruch_Spinoza.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Bernardino_Telesio.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Boston_University.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Concepts_in_metaphysics.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_philosophy.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Latin_philosophical_phrases.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Systems_theory.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Centrifugal_force.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Cicero.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink City_Lights_Bookstore.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Common_Era.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Complex_systems.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Conation.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Cultural_anthropology.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Dante_Alighieri.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink David_Bidney.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Determinism.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Diogenes_Laërtius.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Drag_(physics).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Duns_Scotus.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Elasticity_(physics).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Emergence.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Emotion.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Erhard_Weigel.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Ethics_(Spinoza).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Evolution.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Firmin_DeBrabander.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Force.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Free_will.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Friction.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Nietzsche.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Galileo_Galilei.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Giambattista_Vico.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Gianni_Vattimo.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink God.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Gottfried_Wilhelm_Leibniz.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Gravity.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Henri_Bergson.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Hylozoism.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Inertia.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Integral.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Intentionality.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Newton.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Buridan.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink John_Cutting_(psychiatrist).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink John_Philoponus.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Judah_Leon_Abravanel.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Louis_Dumont.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Maryland_Institute_College_of_Art.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Materialism.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Matter.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Max_Scheler.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Mechanism_(philosophy).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Metaphysics.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Mind.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Momentum.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Monad_(philosophy).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Motion_(physics).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Naturalism_(philosophy).
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Nature.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Neoplatonism.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Neuroscience.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Newtons_laws_of_motion.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Organism.
- Conatus wikiPageWikiLink Pantheism.