Title | Averroes on the Attainment of Knowledge |
Type | Book Section |
Language | English |
Date | 2018 |
Published in | Knowledge in Medieval Philosophy |
Pages | 59–80 |
Categories | Commentary, De anima, Albert, Thomas, Aristotle |
Author(s) | Richard C. Taylor |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
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Title | Averroismi al plurale. La ricezione del Tafsîr kitâb al-nafs di Ibn Rushd nel Commento alle Sentenze di Tommaso d’Aquino |
Type | Article |
Language | Italian |
Date | 2017 |
Journal | Dianoia |
Volume | 24 |
Pages | 15-32 |
Categories | Aristotle, Commentary, De anima, Averroism, Siger of Brabant, Thomas |
Author(s) | Federico Minzoni |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
A widespread historiographic commonplace, established by Thomas Aquinas himself in his Tractatus de unitate intellectus (1270), takes Siger of Brabant’s Quaestiones in tertium de anima (ca. 1265) to be a latin formulation of Ibn Rušd’s theory of the unity of the material intellect as exposed in the Tafsīr Kitāb al-Nafs (Long Commentary on the De anima, ca. 1186); according to the same view, Aquinas’ philosophy of mind would be the expression of a strongly antiaverroistic – and therefore more orthodox – kind of aristotelianism. Building on a thorough analysis of key texts in Aquinas’ Commentary on the Sentences (1255), I argue in this paper that those who hold Aquinas’ noetic to be anti-averroistic are greatly mistaken: while Siger’s always superficial rushdian inspiration is better understood against the background of a neoplatonic-tinged mind-body dualism clearly at odds with Ibn Rušd’s own strictly peripatetic ontology, Aquinas’ psychology, hylomorfic and not-dualist at its core, is aristotelian mainly inasmuch as it is rushdian. |
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Title | Averroes on the Attainment of Knowledge |
Type | Book Section |
Language | English |
Date | 2018 |
Published in | Knowledge in Medieval Philosophy |
Pages | 59–80 |
Categories | Commentary, De anima, Albert, Thomas, Aristotle |
Author(s) | Richard C. Taylor |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
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Title | Averroismi al plurale. La ricezione del Tafsîr kitâb al-nafs di Ibn Rushd nel Commento alle Sentenze di Tommaso d’Aquino |
Type | Article |
Language | Italian |
Date | 2017 |
Journal | Dianoia |
Volume | 24 |
Pages | 15-32 |
Categories | Aristotle, Commentary, De anima, Averroism, Siger of Brabant, Thomas |
Author(s) | Federico Minzoni |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
A widespread historiographic commonplace, established by Thomas Aquinas himself in his Tractatus de unitate intellectus (1270), takes Siger of Brabant’s Quaestiones in tertium de anima (ca. 1265) to be a latin formulation of Ibn Rušd’s theory of the unity of the material intellect as exposed in the Tafsīr Kitāb al-Nafs (Long Commentary on the De anima, ca. 1186); according to the same view, Aquinas’ philosophy of mind would be the expression of a strongly antiaverroistic – and therefore more orthodox – kind of aristotelianism. Building on a thorough analysis of key texts in Aquinas’ Commentary on the Sentences (1255), I argue in this paper that those who hold Aquinas’ noetic to be anti-averroistic are greatly mistaken: while Siger’s always superficial rushdian inspiration is better understood against the background of a neoplatonic-tinged mind-body dualism clearly at odds with Ibn Rušd’s own strictly peripatetic ontology, Aquinas’ psychology, hylomorfic and not-dualist at its core, is aristotelian mainly inasmuch as it is rushdian. |
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