On the Mind
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the work is lost or fragmentary and reconstructed from titles and testimonia.","GeoCards":[{"Label":"Region","Key":"Region:1"},{"Label":"Terra Avita","Key":"TerraAvita:2"},{"Label":"Terra Avita Region","Key":"TerraAvitaRegion:8"},{"Label":"Modern Country","Key":"Country:GRC:2"}],"OriginalTitle":"Peri nou","Language":"Ancient Greek","DisciplineCards":[{"Label":"Primary Discipline","Key":"Discipline:philosophy-of-mind"},{"Label":"Secondary Discipline","Key":"Discipline:epistemology"}],"Tradition":"Presocratic atomism","FullText":null,"CoreThesis":["Democritus treats mind as part of nature, explaining thought and judgment through refined material processes and the limits of sense."],"Classification":{"AlternateTitles":"On Mind; On Understanding","KeyConcepts":"mind; thought; soul; judgment; perception; materialism","Methodology":"Fragmentary atomist reconstruction through ancient testimony, lost-title lists, doxography, ethical maxims, causal explanation, sensory-rational contrast, mathematical report, and comparative Presocratic context.","Structure":"The public page presents the received title, alternate forms, proxy ordering year, lost or fragmentary status, philosophical focus, and a visible note that no full-text badge is being claimed."},"Arguments":["Democritus treats mind as part of nature, explaining thought and judgment through refined material processes and the limits of sense."],"Influence":{"InfluencedBy":"Leucippus, Parmenides, Zeno of Elea, Empedocles, Anaxagoras, Ionian natural philosophy, Pythagorean mathematical interests, and Abderite intellectual culture.","InfluenceOn":""},"Significance":["Accepted as a direct lost mind-focused title in Democritus tradition.","The work matters because Democritus frames nature, perception, mind, society, and value through causal explanation without divine caprice."],"EvidenceNote":["Accepted as a direct lost mind-focused title in Democritus tradition."],"MainSections":[{"Kind":"TextSection","Title":"Core Thesis","Paragraphs":["Democritus treats mind as part of nature, explaining thought and judgment through refined material processes and the limits of sense."]},{"Kind":"FieldSection","Title":"Classification","Fields":[{"Label":"Alternate Titles","Value":"On Mind; 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