Conscience as Cognition - Phenomenological Complementing of Aquinas’s Theory of Conscience

Jan Krokos

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Jan Krokos - Conscience as Cognition - Phenomenological Complementing of Aquinas’s Theory of Conscience.
This study analyzes conscience as a specific cognition, as an axiological consciousness of a human act. The doctrine of Thomas Aquinas plays an important... Lire la suite
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Résumé

This study analyzes conscience as a specific cognition, as an axiological consciousness of a human act. The doctrine of Thomas Aquinas plays an important role here : He assumes conscience to be a cognition ; his concept of conscience is quite significant and had great influence on philosophical thinking. Nevertheless, this doctrine on conscience is not satisfying enough from the viewpoint of epistemology and, therefore, it requires a complement.
Such a complement is found in phenomenological analyses, especially in those concerning consciousness. Underlying the main problem of the study – which is conscience as a cognition – is the question of enriching Thomism with phenomenology.

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Biographie de Jan Krokos

Jan Krokos is Professor of Philosophy and Dean of the Faculty of Christian Philosophy at Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University (Poland). He studied and acquired a PhD at the Catholic University of Lublin (Poland). He carries out research on the theory of knowledge, the methodology of philosophy, and the relation of religion, science and philosophy. In his research, he refers to three philosophical traditions : Thomism, Phenomenology and Analytical Philosophy.

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