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