In the Long Commentary on the De anima, Averroes posits three separate intelligences in the anima rationalis or the rational soul: agent intellect or intellectus agens, material or passible intellect, intellectus possibilis or intellectus passibilis, and speculative intellect, intellectus speculativus, or actualized or acquired intellect, intellectus adeptus. In the De anima 3.1.5, “there are three parts of the intellect in the soul; the first is the receptive intellect, the second, the active intellect, and the third is actual intellection…,” that is, speculative or actualized, agent, and material. While material intellect is “partly generable and corruptible, partly eternal,” corporeal and incorporeal, the speculative and agent intellects...
Of all the Aristotelian doctrines perhaps the most difficult is that concerning the Active and Passi...
Aristotle is clearly aware that the theory of separable intellect is not without its own difficultie...
In De Anima I 4, Aristotle describes the intellect (nous) as a sort of substance, separate and incor...
In the Long Commentary on the De anima, Averroes posits three separate intelligences in the anima ra...
This article explicates Averroes\u27s understanding of human knowing and abstraction in this three c...
Averroes was fully aware of the fact that Aristotle’s account of intellect as propounded in De Anima...
The Explanation of the De Anima of Aristotle is the most important issue for Scholastic Philosophers...
Alexander of Aphrodisias (fl. c. 198–209) was born somewhere around 150, in Aphrodisia on the Aegean...
The relationship between the material intellect and the active intellect from Averroes’ perspective ...
Este trabalho tem como objetivo proceder ao exame da análise realizada por Averróis a respeito da na...
Though Averroes is not generally considered to be sympathetic to Neoplatonic thinking, there are def...
In Aristotle’s De anima 3.5, the relation between intellect and thought, and between thought and obj...
De Anima III 5 introduces one of Aristotle’s most perplexing doctrines. In this short and obscure c...
Themistius (317–c. 387) was born into an aristocratic family and ran a paripatetic school of philoso...
When discussing Aristotle’s psychological writings we invariably run the risk of anachronism if we a...
Of all the Aristotelian doctrines perhaps the most difficult is that concerning the Active and Passi...
Aristotle is clearly aware that the theory of separable intellect is not without its own difficultie...
In De Anima I 4, Aristotle describes the intellect (nous) as a sort of substance, separate and incor...
In the Long Commentary on the De anima, Averroes posits three separate intelligences in the anima ra...
This article explicates Averroes\u27s understanding of human knowing and abstraction in this three c...
Averroes was fully aware of the fact that Aristotle’s account of intellect as propounded in De Anima...
The Explanation of the De Anima of Aristotle is the most important issue for Scholastic Philosophers...
Alexander of Aphrodisias (fl. c. 198–209) was born somewhere around 150, in Aphrodisia on the Aegean...
The relationship between the material intellect and the active intellect from Averroes’ perspective ...
Este trabalho tem como objetivo proceder ao exame da análise realizada por Averróis a respeito da na...
Though Averroes is not generally considered to be sympathetic to Neoplatonic thinking, there are def...
In Aristotle’s De anima 3.5, the relation between intellect and thought, and between thought and obj...
De Anima III 5 introduces one of Aristotle’s most perplexing doctrines. In this short and obscure c...
Themistius (317–c. 387) was born into an aristocratic family and ran a paripatetic school of philoso...
When discussing Aristotle’s psychological writings we invariably run the risk of anachronism if we a...
Of all the Aristotelian doctrines perhaps the most difficult is that concerning the Active and Passi...
Aristotle is clearly aware that the theory of separable intellect is not without its own difficultie...
In De Anima I 4, Aristotle describes the intellect (nous) as a sort of substance, separate and incor...