In this essay I consider from various perspectives the question of whether, for Aristotle, intuition (nous) is part of the process of induction (epagoge) helping to reach the first principles (archai) or whether nous is rather a state of knowing first brought about through a successful induction alone. I have argued we should be careful of drawing conclusions about the nature of the involvement of nous in the grasping of first principles on the basis of APo alone. The main reasons I give for this are to be found in the connections that can be drawn between Aristotle’s account of the grasping of the first principles from Met. I.1, the account of the intellectual grasp of the forms in DA II & III and the process of induction described in ...
This paper presents Aristotle’s method of understanding the first principles of natural things in th...
This chapter introduces the phenomenological possibility and condition of intuition. Among the Greek...
In this paper I investigate one central source of Aristotle\u27s dissatisfaction with a comprehensiv...
In this essay I consider from various perspectives the question of whether, for Aristotle, intuition...
Aristoteles, “ilk ilkelerin” nasıl bilinebileceği sorusuna, II. Analitikler’de epagoge ve nous yanıt...
Recent scholars have argued that the skeptical problem of induction was unknown until the 18th centu...
This chapter has two objectives. The first is to clarify Aristotle’s view of the first principles of...
In this paper Baltussen proposes to review existing translations of 'nous' in Aristotle in order to ...
In this paper I argue against rationalist readings of Aristotle's epistemology, on which our scienti...
This dissertation inaugurates a study on the connections between the philosophies of Aristotle and C...
In this first part of a 2-part survey of Aristotle's epistemology, I present an overview of the feat...
The problem of induction--the problem of how one can justify an inference from observations of some...
In this paper I will try to clarify Aristotle’s conception of induction or epagoge. I will begin by ...
how does one inquire into the truth of first principles? Where does one begin when deciding where to...
The Aristotelian-Thomistic theory of the abstractive induction of immediate first principles and me...
This paper presents Aristotle’s method of understanding the first principles of natural things in th...
This chapter introduces the phenomenological possibility and condition of intuition. Among the Greek...
In this paper I investigate one central source of Aristotle\u27s dissatisfaction with a comprehensiv...
In this essay I consider from various perspectives the question of whether, for Aristotle, intuition...
Aristoteles, “ilk ilkelerin” nasıl bilinebileceği sorusuna, II. Analitikler’de epagoge ve nous yanıt...
Recent scholars have argued that the skeptical problem of induction was unknown until the 18th centu...
This chapter has two objectives. The first is to clarify Aristotle’s view of the first principles of...
In this paper Baltussen proposes to review existing translations of 'nous' in Aristotle in order to ...
In this paper I argue against rationalist readings of Aristotle's epistemology, on which our scienti...
This dissertation inaugurates a study on the connections between the philosophies of Aristotle and C...
In this first part of a 2-part survey of Aristotle's epistemology, I present an overview of the feat...
The problem of induction--the problem of how one can justify an inference from observations of some...
In this paper I will try to clarify Aristotle’s conception of induction or epagoge. I will begin by ...
how does one inquire into the truth of first principles? Where does one begin when deciding where to...
The Aristotelian-Thomistic theory of the abstractive induction of immediate first principles and me...
This paper presents Aristotle’s method of understanding the first principles of natural things in th...
This chapter introduces the phenomenological possibility and condition of intuition. Among the Greek...
In this paper I investigate one central source of Aristotle\u27s dissatisfaction with a comprehensiv...