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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

[en] OBJECTIVITY AND NATURE BASED ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF ALFRED NORTH WHITEHEAD / [pt] OBJETIVIDADE E NATUREZA A PARTIR DA FILOSOFIA DE ALFRED NORTH WHITEHEAD

LIA FONSECA LATTMAN-WELTMAN 16 September 2024 (has links)
[pt] Esta dissertação busca elaborar uma noção de objetividade a partir do pensamento de Alfred North Whitehead e sua concepção de natureza. Rejeitando a concepção de matéria veiculada pelo que o filósofo chama de materialismo científico, ele transforma o que entendemos por natureza de modo a descrever uma realidade material inteiramente diversa daquela. Na natureza proposta por Whitehead, vemos aspectos geralmente considerados subjetivos, que se viam excluídos desse âmbito pensado enquanto mera matéria, voltarem a fazer parte dele. Recorrendo às obras O Conceito de Natureza (1920), A Ciência e o mundo moderno (1925), e Processo e Realidade (1929), chegamos ao entendimento de que, uma vez transformada, essa natureza proporciona um terreno fértil para a elaboração de uma nova concepção de objetividade. / [en] This dissertation aims to develop a notion of objectivity based on the thought of Alfred North Whitehead and his understanding of nature. While rejecting the concept of nature conveyed by what the philosopher calls scientific materialism, he transforms what we think of as nature so as to describe an entirely different material reality. In the nature proposed by Whitehead, we see aspects generally considered to be subjective, which were excluded from this realm while it was conceived as mere matter, return as a constitutive part of it. By resorting to his works The Concept of Nature (1920), Science and the Modern World (1925), and Process and Reality (1929), we arrive at the understanding that, once transformed, this new idea of nature provides a fertile ground for the development of a new concept of objectivity.

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