- Author:
Jarosław Czarnota
- Institution:
Uniwersytet Jana Kochanowskiego w Kielcach
- Year of publication:
2018
- Source:
Show
- Pages:
171-182
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/tpom2018211
- PDF:
tpom/28/tpom2811.pdf
Linguistic means of expressing availability and potential volitional states
This article analyzes linguistic means of nomination of availability and potential states of the volitional states with varying degrees of severity. The problem of understanding the boundaries of human experience has been clarified, followed by modal linguistic forms and their impact on the evaluation and creation of possible experience. Finally, a mechanism for the realization of will states and the influence of the willpower on the creation of volitional acts by the attention and concentration of the subject were described.
- Author:
Janusz Świniarski
- E-mail:
janusz.swiniarski@wat.edu.pl
- Institution:
Military University of Technology (Poland)
- ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4694-4600
- Published online:
3 January 2023
- Final submission:
30 September 2022
- Printed issue:
June 2023
- Source:
Show
- Page no:
23
- Pages:
37-59
- DOI Address:
https://doi.org/10.15804/ppsy202302
- PDF:
ppsy/52/ppsy202302.pdf
The inspiration of this text is the belief of the Pythagoreans that the roots and source of complete knowledge is the quadruple expressed in the “arch-four”, also called as tetractys. Hence the hypothesis considered in this paper is: the basis of the philosophy of social sciences is entangled in these four valours, manifested in what is “general and necessary” (scientific) in social life, the first and universal as to the “principles and causes” of this life (theoretically philosophical) and “which can be different in it” (practically philosophical) and “intuitive”. The quadruple appears with different clarity in the history of human thought, which seeks clarification and understanding of the things being cognised, including such a thing as society. It is exposed in the oath of the Pythagoreans, the writings of Plato and Aristotle, who applied these four valours, among other things, in distinguishing the four types of knowledge and learning about the first four causes and principles. This fourfold division seems to be experiencing a renaissance in contemporary theological-cognitive holism and can be treated as an expressive, a “hard core”, and the basis of research not only of social but mainly of global society as a social system. This entanglement of the foundations of the philosophy of the social sciences leads to the suggestion of defining this philosophy as the knowledge of social being composed of “what is general and necessary” (scientific), genetically first, universal (theoretically philosophical) and “being able to be different” (philosophically practical) and intuitive.