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"prerational" Definitions
  1. preceding the development of intelligence
"prerational" Antonyms

4 Sentences With "prerational"

How to use prerational in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "prerational" and check conjugation/comparative form for "prerational". Mastering all the usages of "prerational" from sentence examples published by news publications.

We are born into them most of the time and are bonded to them by prerational cords of sympathy and affection.
Already in the 18th century, civilization was not always seen as an improvement. One historically important distinction between culture and civilization is from the writings of Rousseau, particularly his work about education, Emile. Here, civilization, being more rational and socially driven, is not fully in accord with human nature, and "human wholeness is achievable only through the recovery of or approximation to an original discursive or prerational natural unity" (see noble savage). From this, a new approach was developed, especially in Germany, first by Johann Gottfried Herder, and later by philosophers such as Kierkegaard and Nietzsche.
George Santayana in his work The Life of Reason postulated the tenets of the all encompassing order the Church had brought and as the repository of the legacy of classical antiquity: > The enterprise of individuals or of small aristocratic bodies has meantime > sown the world which we call civilised with some seeds and nuclei of order. > There are scattered about a variety of churches, industries, academies, and > governments. But the universal order once dreamt of and nominally almost > established, the empire of universal peace, all-permeating rational art, and > philosophical worship, is mentioned no more. An unformulated conception, the > prerational ethics of private privilege and national unity, fills the > background of men's minds.
Further pursuing this line of thought, but utilizing the moral rationale of "ought", Kant's third critique, Critique of Judgement begins by examining the realm of aesthetics in route to ascertaining; as Wilber paraphrases it, "that the interior "ought" of moral reasoning could never get going in the first place without the postulates of a transcendental Spirit". Consequently, but in the aftermath of Kant's contributions, the Romantics "began an intense effort to make the I-domain, the subjective domain—and especially the domain of aesthetics, sentiment, emotion, heroic self-expression, and feeling—the royal road to Spirit and the Absolute". However, because "romanticism was a philosophical revolt against rationalism" the movement "fell violent prey to" what Wilber has termed, "the pre/trans fallacy [emphasis in original], namely, the confusion of prerational with transrational simply because both are nonrational" [emphasis added]. Similarly, there also existed an ambiguity "between premodern and modern cultures" as to "the direction in which the universe" was said to be unfolding.

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