3 resultados para Cuerpo lúteo
em Biblioteca Digital de la Universidad Católica Argentina
Resumo:
Resumen: Este trabajo trata clara y brevemente el pensamiento de San Buenaventura acerca de la unión entre cuerpo y alma, y su teoría de la composición hilemórfica del alma como una respuesta frente a la disputa entre las posturas aristotélica y platónica y frente a los planteos de Averroes acerca del intelecto agente.
Resumo:
No necesitamos justificar la actualidad del problema mente-cuerpo en una parte importante de la filosofía contemporánea. Puede decirse que el nacimiento oficial del asunto se remonta a dos artículos pioneros aparecidos en 1958 y en 1959 escritos por Herbert Feigl el primero y J.J.C. Smart el segundo. Se trata de un asunto planteado en buena medida a partir de los descubrimientos en materia de anatomía y fisiología cerebral y de la relevancia del funcionamiento del cerebro en los actos mentales. Sin ánimo de simplificar excesivamente, puede decirse que las neurociencias se proponen hallar en la complejidad de la organización cerebral la explicación fundamental de la mente misma, e incluso de los actos humanos.
Resumo:
Women and men are subjects defined both by their physical-natural reality and their socio-cultural environment. In this way they are reified, and many such examples can be found throughout history. We are interested in the situation of women in Ancient Mesopotamia, particularly the daughters of Zimrî-Lîm, king of the city of Mari, the archaeological site of Tell Hariri, modern Syria, during the 18th century BC. Zimrî- Lîm made marriages a policy of the state. He himself married foreign women and married their joint daughters to other important kings as well. This marital policy was another, more extended, way of dominion where women were a nexus between Mari and other states. In this paper, we will analyze the roles which were assigned and developed by royal women from a political level via a comprehensive approach. These women are presented generally as political objects, though, in extreme cases also they were taking forward actions as subjects and by it they were visualized as “the other,” the foreigner and, in some cases, the enemy.