LADISLAV HEJDÁNEK ARCHIVES | Cardfile

Here you will find a digitized image of Hejdánek's original filing cabinet. Its total volume is many thousand tickets. We publish them in parts as we handle them. At the moment we have worked out what prof. Hejdánek himself developed electronically. However, much work remains on paper cards. In addition to Hejdánek's extracts from reading, the filing cabinet also includes his own thought work from recent years, which cannot be found elsewhere.


Emergence

SEP (2006)
Emergence is a notorious philosophical term of art. A variety of theorists have appropriated it for their purposes ever since George Henry Lewes gave it a philosophical sense in his 1875 Problems of Life and Mind. We might roughly characterize the shared meaning thus: emergent entities (properties or substances) ‘arise’ out of more fundamental entities and yet are ‘novel’ or ‘irreducible’ with respect to them. (For example, it is sometimes said that consciousness is an emergent property of the brain.) Each of the quoted terms is slippery in its own right, and their specifications yield the varied notions of emergence that we discuss below. There has been renewed interest in emergence within discussions of the behavior of complex systems and debates over the reconcilability of mental causation, intentionality, or consciousness with physicalism.
www. – SEP, publ. Oct 23, 2006
date of origin: červen 2007

Existenciální | Existencielní

A. Halder – M. Müller (1988)
existenziell (lat.), das unmittelbare Dasein eines Einzelnen, bestimmten Menschen betreffend, im Unterschied zu existenzial = (fundamental-)ontologisch zum Dasein des Menschen als solchem gehörig.
(6920, Philosophisches Wörterbuch, Freiburg etc. 1993 [11988], S. 86.)
date of origin: červenec 2001