Alexander of Aphrodisias (fl. c. 198–209) was born somewhere around 150, in Aphrodisia on the Aegean Sea. He began his career in Alexandria during the reign of Septimius Severus, was appointed to the peripatetic chair at the Lyceum in Athens in 198, a post established by Marcus Aurelius, wrote a commentary on the De anima of Aristotle, and died in 211. According to Porphyry, Alexander was an authority read in the seminars of Plotinus in Rome. He is the earliest philosopher who saw the active intellect implied in Book III of the De anima of Aristotle as transcendent in relation to the material intellect. He connected the active intellect with the incorporeal and eternal cause of the universe described by Aristotle in Book XII of the Metaphys...
An original thinker in his own right and the greatest ancient commentator on Aristotle, Alexander of...
Aristotle’s active intellect has been a subject of much interpretive controversy over the centuries....
Aristotle is clearly aware that the theory of separable intellect is not without its own difficultie...
Alexander of Aphrodisias (fl. c. 198–209) was born somewhere around 150, in Aphrodisia on the Aegean...
Themistius (317–c. 387) was born into an aristocratic family and ran a paripatetic school of philoso...
In the Long Commentary on the De anima, Averroes posits three separate intelligences in the anima ra...
In his treatise "On the Intellect," Alexander of Aphrodisias paraphrases Aristotleʼs views on the in...
When discussing Aristotle’s psychological writings we invariably run the risk of anachronism if we a...
In Aristotle’s De anima 3.5, the relation between intellect and thought, and between thought and obj...
"An original thinker in his own right and the greatest ancient commentator on Aristotle, Alexander o...
De Anima III 5 introduces one of Aristotle’s most perplexing doctrines. In this short and obscure c...
The topic of this work is Aristotle’s doctrine of the intellect (ὁ νοῦς) as the noetic faculty of th...
In his own De anima, Alexander of Aphrodisias famously identifies the "active" (poietikon) intellect...
Though Averroes is not generally considered to be sympathetic to Neoplatonic thinking, there are def...
Of all the Aristotelian doctrines perhaps the most difficult is that concerning the Active and Passi...
An original thinker in his own right and the greatest ancient commentator on Aristotle, Alexander of...
Aristotle’s active intellect has been a subject of much interpretive controversy over the centuries....
Aristotle is clearly aware that the theory of separable intellect is not without its own difficultie...
Alexander of Aphrodisias (fl. c. 198–209) was born somewhere around 150, in Aphrodisia on the Aegean...
Themistius (317–c. 387) was born into an aristocratic family and ran a paripatetic school of philoso...
In the Long Commentary on the De anima, Averroes posits three separate intelligences in the anima ra...
In his treatise "On the Intellect," Alexander of Aphrodisias paraphrases Aristotleʼs views on the in...
When discussing Aristotle’s psychological writings we invariably run the risk of anachronism if we a...
In Aristotle’s De anima 3.5, the relation between intellect and thought, and between thought and obj...
"An original thinker in his own right and the greatest ancient commentator on Aristotle, Alexander o...
De Anima III 5 introduces one of Aristotle’s most perplexing doctrines. In this short and obscure c...
The topic of this work is Aristotle’s doctrine of the intellect (ὁ νοῦς) as the noetic faculty of th...
In his own De anima, Alexander of Aphrodisias famously identifies the "active" (poietikon) intellect...
Though Averroes is not generally considered to be sympathetic to Neoplatonic thinking, there are def...
Of all the Aristotelian doctrines perhaps the most difficult is that concerning the Active and Passi...
An original thinker in his own right and the greatest ancient commentator on Aristotle, Alexander of...
Aristotle’s active intellect has been a subject of much interpretive controversy over the centuries....
Aristotle is clearly aware that the theory of separable intellect is not without its own difficultie...