primary source in early modern philosophy
C45966
concept
A primary source in early modern philosophy is an original text—such as a treatise, essay, correspondence, or lecture—written by a philosopher between roughly 1500 and 1800 that directly presents their own arguments, theories, and ideas.
All labels observed (3)
| Label | Occurrences |
|---|---|
| early modern philosophy work | 1 |
| primary source in early modern philosophy canonical | 1 |
| text in modern philosophy | 1 |
Description generation (CDg)
The one-sentence description above was generated by prompting gpt-5.1 with the class name and this instruction.
Instruction
generate a one-sentence description for a given conceptual class. # Response Format Return only the sentence: "Description: [one-sentence description of the conceptional class]"
Input
Class: primary source in early modern philosophy
Generated description
A primary source in early modern philosophy is an original text—such as a treatise, essay, correspondence, or lecture—written by a philosopher between roughly 1500 and 1800 that directly presents their own arguments, theories, and ideas.
Instances (3)
| Instance | Via concept surface |
|---|---|
| Elisabeth–Descartes correspondence | — |
| Meditatio Tertia | text in modern philosophy |
| Ethics (Spinoza) | early modern philosophy work |