occasionalist

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occasionalist

(əˈkeɪʒənəlɪst) philosophy
n
(Philosophy) a person who subscribes to the theory of occasionalism
adj
(Philosophy) relating to the theory of occasionalism or those who subscribe to this doctrine
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
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References in periodicals archive
Broad argues that, in spite of the strong influence of the English Malebranchean John Norris on her thought, Astell was not an occasionalist about body--mind interaction.
But must this role be as the complete and sole cause of all natural phenomena, as the occasionalist would have it?
Whereas commentators are practically unanimous in granting Coredmoy's full occasionalist pedigree, Nadler asserts that they miss an important lack of argumentation against the soul's activity within Cordemoy's account.
In Part I, Ott aims to vindicate in part the Hatfield-Garber thesis that Descartes is a "limited occasionalist": in the Principles of Philosophy (though not in Le Monde), he holds that created minds have causal powers, but bodies do not.
Nicolas Malebranche; freedom in an occasionalist world.
It is a problem already known to the abandoned occasionalist tradition, which cannot remain abandoned any longer due to the contributions of a surprising figure--Martin Heidegger.
In fact, Griffel had already asserted that "in its practical implications and particularly regarding the pursuit of the natural sciences, the occasionalist universe of al-Ghazali is indistinguishable from the universe of the falasifa" (p.
While the opponent here is not identified, the character of his objection strongly suggests that Ibn Sina is dealing with an occasionalist. For in attacking the notion of ontological priority in the second sense (which is both necessary and necessitating), Ibn Sina clearly indicates his rejection of essential efficient causation itself.
Malebranche believed, as an occasionalist, that God is the only true cause of effects in nature, but also maintained that human freedom is among the greatest of the effects of divine wisdom.
In the realm of natural philosophy, the rise of voluntaristic conceptions of God along with a trend towards occasionalist understandings of causation gave rise to the notion of divinely ordained, externally imposed laws of nature.
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