Raja Bahlul

Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
  •  296
    Emotion as patheception
    Philosophical Explorations 18 (1): 104-122. 2015.
    Emotions cannot be fully understood in purely cognitive terms. Nor can they be fully understood as mere feelings with no content. But it has not been easy to give an account of the relation of affect and cognition in a way that preserves the perceived unity of emotional experience. Consequently, emotion theories tend to lean either toward cognitivism, or, alternatively, the view that emotions are basically non-cognitive affairs. The aim of this paper is to argue for an account of emotion as a un…Read more
  •  132
    Leibniz, Aristotle, and the Problem of Individuation
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 73 (3): 185. 1992.
    Leibniz and Aristotle offer diametrically opposed accounts of what it is for ordinary particulars to be numerically diverse. Leibniz, through his Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles (PII), affirms that numerically diverse particulars must have different qualities, whereas Aristotle insists that such particulars are different on account of their "matter". In this paper I seek to bridge the gap between these two rival accounts by means of a (PII)-like principle which seems to be a conseque…Read more
  •  1404
    Modernity and Islamic Religious Consciousness
    In Shahram Akbarzadeh (ed.), A Handbook of Political Islam, . pp. 35-50. 2012.
    A discussion of the intellectual impact which Modernity has had on Islamic religious consciousness.