Results for 'I. Anima'

975 found
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  1. Aristotle on Physical Necessity and the Limits of Teleological Explanation Christopher Byrne.I. I. Anima & T. O. de Anima - 2002 - Apeiron 35:19.
  2. Frede and Patzig on Definition in Metaphysics Z. 10 and 11.I. Anima - 1997 - Phronesis 42:3.
     
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  3.  22
    The effect of unattended visual and auditory words on cross-modal naming.Anima Sen & Michael I. Posner - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (6):405-408.
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  4. Aspects de la théorie de la perception chez les néoplatoniciens: sensation (aïo&naiç), sensation commune (Koivr| a'io&r| aiç), sensibles communs (Koivà aioOr| trx) et conscience de soi (owaiaônoiç).I. HAdoT - 1997 - Documenti E Studi Sulla Tradizione Filosofica Medievale 8 (1997):33-85.
    Dopo uno sguardo generale alla dottrina dell'anima nel tardo neoplatonismo e alla tradizione dei commentari al De anima di Aristotele, l'A. esamina il tema della sensazione, della sensazione comune, dei sensibili comuni e della coscienza soprattutto in Simplicio, Prisciano e Filopono. L'A. propone inoltre un esame critico dello studio di P. Lautner Rival Theories of Self-Awareness in Late Neoplatonism in «Bullettin of the Institute of Classical Studies of the University of London» 29 107-16. L'ultima parte del saggio è (...)
     
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  5.  10
    Aquinas on Reincarnation.Marie I. George - 1996 - The Thomist 60 (1):33-52.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:AQUINAS ON REINCARNATION MARIE I. GEORGE St. John's University Jamaica, New York I. INTRODUCTION AQUINAS EXPLICITLY addresses the question of whether reincarnation is possible on numerous occasions.1 Not surprisingly, his most extensive and subtle treatment of the subject is found in a work addressed to nonChristians, the Summa Contra Gentiles. Aquinas took it to be his duty as Christian philosopher to address errors which were apt to have a (...)
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  6. Callisto I patriarca, I 100 (109) capitoli sulla purezza dell'anima. Introduzione, edizione E traduzione (*).Antonio Rigo - 2010 - Byzantion 80:333-407.
    The article presents the first edition of the Chapters on the purity of the soul written by the patriarch of Constantinople, Callistus I , with an italian translation and commentary. Many themes of the Chapters are related to the byzantine ascetical tradition and the teaching of Callistus' spiritual father, Gregory the Sinaite. Others are connected to the theological discussions of the period and the polemics of the patriarch against Nicephorus Gregoras.
     
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  7.  10
    I nomi comuni dell'anima.Stefano Baratta & Flavio Ermini (eds.) - 2005 - Bergamo: Moretti & Vitali.
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  8. Expositio super I De anima Aristotelis et commentatoris: 1503.Pietro Pomponazzi - 2018 - Roma: Edizioni di storia e letteratura. Edited by Antonio Surian & Massimiliano Chianese.
    Nel corso della sua lunga attività di insegnamento presso le Università di Padova e di Bologna, Pietro Pomponazzi si confrontò ripetutamente con il De anima di Aristotele e con il relativo commento di Averroè. Il suo primo corso svolto in qualità di professore ordinario a Padova risale al 1499, il frutto più maturo delle sue riflessioni è sicuramente il celebre Tractatus de immortalitate animae, pubblicato a Bologna nel 1516, che lo proiettò al centro di polemiche, discussioni e condanne. Gli (...)
     
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  9.  10
    I segni dell'anima: saggio sull'immagine.Carlo Sini - 1989 - Roma-Bari: Laterza.
    Da Platone a J.-P. Sartre a Pierce e soprattutto a Wittgenstein, una ricognizione storica del tema dell'immagine mostra quanto inconsistente sia l'ipotesi di una sua origine psichica, e quanto fondata, al contrario, è quella che la considera un "segno" filosofico di cui ci serviamo per riconoscere e comprendere il mondo.
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  10. I corpi, essendo esistenze "formali", implicano che Dio esista e che ognuno di noi, in quanto soggetto conoscente, sia un'anima.Erminio Rizzi - 2007 - Filosofia Oggi 30 (118):201-222.
  11. I destini dell'anima secondo le dottrine arcaiche e ieratiche.A. Cura di Luca Valentini - 2021 - In Luca Valentini & Paolo Izzo (eds.), Il concetto di morte nelle società arcaiche e nell'antico Egitto. Napoli: Stamperia del Valentino.
     
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  12. I miti platonici sull'anima e soi suoi destini.Adolfo LÉvi - 1945 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 50 (1):148-148.
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  13.  8
    Anselm Studies: An Occasional Journal, Vol. 2, ed. by Joseph Schnaubelt, OSA.I. V. Rev W. Larch Fidler - 1990 - The Thomist 54 (1):184-186.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:184 BOOK REVIEWS knower, one may avoid undercutting the position that the cognitive powers are passive, without failing to do justice to the fact that aware· ness and discrimination are activities of the knower {pp. 71-72; 148· 49, n. 6). Second, Kai holds that the individual human being cannot really he said to have intuitive mind in himself: "Man has mind; hut only to a certain degree and without (...)
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  14.  7
    Pars I: Sophoniae in libros Aristotelis de anima paraphrasis. Pars II: Anonymi in Aristotelis categorias paraphrasis. Pars III: Themistii quae fertur in Aristotelis analyticorum priorum librum I paraphrasis. Pars IV: Anonymi in Aristotelis Sophisticos ele.Michael Hayduck & Maximilian Wallies (eds.) - 1960 - De Gruyter.
    Commentaries on Aristotle's writings have been produced since the 2nd century AD. This edition contains Greek commentaries on his work from the 3rd to the 8th centuries AD by, among others, Alexander of Aphrodiensias, Themistios, Joh. Philoponus, Simplicius in Greek.
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  15. Eulogus seu anima separata ieusque passione = Eulog ili o odvojenoj duši i njezinoj trpnji.Pavao Skalić - 1995 - In Erna Banić-Pajnić (ed.), Magnum miraculum, homo: (veliko čudo, čovjek): humanističko-renesansna problematika čovjeka u djelima hrvatskih renesansnih filozofa. Zagreb: Hrvatska Sveučilišna Naklada.
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  16. De passionibus animae in I-II Summae theologiae divi Thomae expositio (qq. XXII-XLVIII) Editio praeparata a Victorino Rodríguez.Santiago María Ramírez - 1973 - Madrid,: Instituto de Filosofía "Luis Vives,".
     
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  17.  10
    I fantasmi, il cervello, l'anima: Schopenhauer, l'occulto e la scienza.Marco Segala - 1998 - Firenze: L.S. Olschki.
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  18.  29
    Capitoli sulla purezza dell'anima del patriarca Callisto I.Antonio Rigo - 2008 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 100 (2):779-784.
  19.  12
    Giamblico, De anima: i frammenti, la dottrina.Lucrezia Iris Martone - 2014 - Pisa: Pisa University Press. Edited by H. D. Saffrey, Lucrezia Iris Martone & Iamblichus.
    In recent years, the attention of scholars to the figure and work of Iamblichus has increased, while the emphasis is on his thought in the history of the Platonic school. However, a major work still remains to be studied: the De Anima. Preserved only in fragments in the anthology of Stobaeus, it proves to be of crucial importance for the understanding of the development of Platonism at the end of antiquity.
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  20.  17
    Ai confini dell' anima: I greci e la follia.Cecilia Josefina Perczyk - 2012 - Argos (Universidad Simón Bolívar) 35 (2):104-106.
    El presente artículo aborda las connotaciones y los fundamentos de la paráfrasis cum canere vellem en Serv. Ecl. 6. 3. El análisis del sentido del verbo volo en este contexto y la confrontación del pasaje con Serv. Ecl. 6. 5 revelan que Servio interpreta la frase cum canerem reges et proelia como referencia a un temprano empeño de Virgilio en componer poesía épica, del que pronto desistió. Esta interpretación está condicionada por la idea de que la secuencia cronológica Églogas - (...)
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  21. De Anima II 5.Myles F. Burnyeat - 2002 - Phronesis 47 (1):28 - 90.
    This is a close scrutiny of "De Anima II 5", led by two questions. First, what can be learned from so long and intricate a discussion about the neglected problem of how to read an Aristotelian chapter? Second, what can the chapter, properly read, teach us about some widely debated issues in Aristotle's theory of perception? I argue that it refutes two claims defended by Martha Nussbaum, Hilary Putnam, and Richard Sorabji: (i) that when Aristotle speaks of the perceiver (...)
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  22. Ritratto dell'anima del mondo.Luca Sciortino (ed.) - 2019 - Padua, Province of Padua, Italy: Editrice Il Torchio.
    In different versions, from Heraclitus to Plato and from Plotinus to the Romantic poets, many thinkers have put forward the idea that the universe has a soul, the so called anima mundi. If the soul of a human being can be thought as the totality of the traits which form character and personality, that of the universe too can be imagined as a complex of distinct traits and dispositions which can be recognised in the phenomenal world. Then, we may (...)
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  23.  9
    Corpus anima: reflections from the unity of body and soul.Cedrus Monte - 2016 - Asheville: Chiron Publications.
    "Corpus Anima" is a collection of previously published essays written for professional Jungian journals about the unity of psyche and soma, spirit and matter, body and soul. There are also two chapters of more personal reflections, previously unpublished, including a series of articles on the mid-Atlantic Azorean Archipelago. The essays on psyche and soma come from the direct experience of their unity. We live, life moves, at the confluence of these polarities of spirit and matter, body and soul, where (...)
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  24.  39
    Speculum animae: Richard Rufus on Perception and Cognition.Matthew Etchemendy & Rega Wood - 2011 - Franciscan Studies 69:53-115.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Garrulus sum et loquax et expedire nescio. Diu te tenui in istis, sed de cetero procedam.” These are the words of Richard Rufus of Cornwall, a thirteenth-century Scholastic and lecturer at the Universities of Paris and Oxford. Rufus is apologizing to his readers: “I am garrulous and loquacious, and I don’t know how to be efficient. I have detained you with these things a long while, but let me (...)
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  25.  10
    Structural Issues in the Doxography of De Anima i: a Proposal.Chiara Blengini - 2020 - Méthexis 32 (1):186-217.
    The first book of the De anima contains Aristotle’s psychological doxography. It is usually divided into two sections: the mere listing of the previous theories on the soul (I.2) and their critical examination (I.3–5). Despite such apparent neatness, various discrepancies emerge and the structure of the doxography remains obscure. To account for such problems and for the general agenda of the psychological doxography, I shall propose a tripartite model, arguing that Aristotle’s grouping of his predecessors’ theories is based on (...)
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  26.  7
    Dal conflitto all'armonia: anima & dintorni in Platone.Gianni Guerriero - 2017 - Roma: Edizioni Nuova cultura.
    Il tema dell'anima come dimensione interna e come essenza dell'io, come campo di battaglia in cui costantemente vengono alla luce i suoi innumerevoli conflitti interni, tra forze o energie che si combattono tra di loro in un continuo scontro, in una lotta che si risolve a vantaggio di chi esercita un maggior dominio o potere, costituiscono, nel loro complesso, il panorama in cui si muove la riflessione: da una parte, la ragione (a cui spetta il comando), dall'altra, le svariate (...)
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  27. Why the View of Intellect in De Anima I 4 Isn’t Aristotle’s Own.Caleb Cohoe - 2018 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 26 (2):241-254.
    In De Anima I 4, Aristotle describes the intellect (nous) as a sort of substance, separate and incorruptible. Myles Burnyeat and Lloyd Gerson take this as proof that, for Aristotle, the intellect is a separate eternal entity, not a power belonging to individual humans. Against this reading, I show that this passage does not express Aristotle’s own views, but dialectically examines a reputable position (endoxon) about the intellect that seems to show that it can be subject to change. The (...)
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  28.  9
    Agostino, S., Dialoghi I: La controversia accademica. La felicità. L’ordine. I soliloqui. L’immortalità dell’anima. Introduzione, traduzione e note a cura di Domenico Gentili. [REVIEW]Prosper Grech - 1971 - Augustinianum 11 (1):212-215.
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  29.  47
    Anima e Numero nel Rinascimento. Simbolismo dei numeri e platonismo nel XVI secolo.Marco Ghione - 2024 - Milano: Mimesis Edizioni.
    This essay examines the links between the soul and number in Renaissance thought, from the sixteenth to the early seventeenth century, a period in which ancient philosophy was fully accepted and modern science gradually asserted itself. Thanks to the influences of Kabbalistic thought, Pythagoreanism and Neoplatonism - in particular the works of Porphyry, Iamblichus and Proclus - the study of arithmology, a discipline concerned with the symbolic properties of numbers, spread throughout the Renaissance. By examining largely unpublished treatises such as (...)
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  30.  23
    Why Nous Cannot Be a Magnitude: De Anima I.3.Krisanna Scheiter - 2021 - In Caleb M. Cohoe (ed.), Aristotle's on the Soul: A Critical Guide. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 50-65.
    I examine Aristotle’s reasons in DA I.3 for rejecting the claim that understanding (nous) is a magnitude (megethos), an idea Aristotle associates most explicitly with Plato, who describes nous as a self-moving circle in the Timaeus. Aristotle shows that his definition of soul, on which soul is not a magnitude or body of any kind, can explain perception, thought, and motion better than his predecessor’s materialist accounts. But unlike perception and motion, nous is not actualized through the body nor does (...)
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  31.  20
    Pneuma as Instrumental Body of the Soul in Aristotle’s De Anima I 4 on Afflictions of Old Age.Abraham P. Bos - 2013 - Philotheos 13:113-127.
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  32.  14
    Supplementum Aristotelicum: Volumen Ii/I-Ii: Alexandri Aphrodisiensis Praeter Commentaria Scripta Minora. Pars I: De Anima Liber Cum Mantissa. Pars Ii: Quaestiones. De Fato. De Mixtion.Alexander Aphrodisiensis & H. G. Aristoteles - 1961 - De Gruyter.
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  33.  41
    Parts in Aristotle’s Definition of Soul: De Anima Books I and II.Thomas K. Johansen - 2014 - In Dominik Perler & Klaus Corcilius (eds.), Ockham on Emotions in the Divided Soul. Berlin & New York: De Gruyter. pp. 39-62.
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  34.  3
    Un’anima symphonialis per comprendere se stessi e il mondo. Ildegarda di Bingen tra suono e parola.Paola Muller - 2024 - Doctor Virtualis 19:25-44.
    L’intera vita umana può essere interpretata in termini di armonia e sinfonia per Ildegarda di Bingen: mentre l’armonia significa la restaurazione della relazione tra uomo e Dio e la piena esperienza della redenzione, l’attuale esistenza umana con i suoi pericoli, contraddizioni e peccati, corrisponde a una sinfonia, all’interno della quale Dio fa ascoltare soprattutto la sua misericordia. Ildegarda offre una visione unitaria dell’uomo, divino per l’anima e terreno per il corpo, egli è un microcosmo, una molteplicità ricondotta all’unità. L' (...) umana è _symphonialis_, caratteristica che esprime sia l'accordo fra anima e corpo, sia la partecipazione a ogni sinfonia del creato in virtù della relazione che l’uomo ha con ciò che lo circonda, sia il far musica. _Hildegard of Bingen interprets the whole of human life in terms of harmony and symphony: while harmony means the restoration of the relationship between humans and God and the entire redemption’s experience, the present human existence with its dangers, contradictions, and sins, corresponds to a symphony. Hildegard offers a unified vision of human beings, divine for the soul and earthly for the body. Every person is a microcosm, a multiplicity brought back to unity. The human soul is _symphonialis_, a characteristic expressing both the agreement between soul and body and the participation in every symphony of creation under the relationship that a person has with his or her surroundings, as well as making music._. (shrink)
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  35.  50
    Anima and Animus as a Pair of Opposites: An Offense to Analytical Psychology.Doris Lier - 2011 - Mind and Matter 9 (1):89-109.
    Since Wolfgang Giegerich published his animus psychology in 1994, the topic of anima and animus has become an offense to analytical psychology. This offense began to show with Hillman's essay in 1974. However, Giegerich elaborated the problematic issues in these two notions with admirable clarity and demonstrated that the terminology of Jungian psychology has not been thought through carefully enough. In this contribution I present Giegerich's critique on the concepts of anima and animus due to Jung . Then (...)
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  36.  42
    De Anima II.12.R. Grasso - 2013 - Philosophical Inquiry 37 (1-2):23-44.
    A blatant contradiction seems to characterize the first part of DA II 12: 424a24-25 entails that possession of the power to ‘receive forms without the matter’ is sufficient for being a sense organ, while the ‘wax simile’ supposedly preceding it (424a19-23) attributes the same power to both senses and wax blocks. To solve the contradiction, I contend that Aristotle does not in fact endorse the described ‘wax simile’. He offers, instead, a ‘signature simile’ between the forms received by senses and (...)
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  37.  18
    Self-Knowledge in Petrus Hispanus’ Commentary on the De anima.Celia Alcalde - 2020 - Patristica Et Medievalia 41 (2):71-102.
    In the _Sententia cum questionibus in libros De anima I-II Aristotelis _, attributed to Petrus Hispanus, the recovered Aristotelian understanding of the soul does not completely replace the old Neoplatonic frame. Indeed, the commentary holds the existence of self-knowledge from the very beginning of the existence of the soul, before the acquisition of species. The aim of this paper is to describe _Sententia_’s view on self-knowledge analysing it in the context of its eclectic psychology and epistemology. I will attempt (...)
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  38. Aristotle's De Anima : On Why the Soul is Not a Set of Capacities.Rebekah Johnston - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (2):185-200.
    Although it is common for interpreters of Aristotle's De Anima to treat the soul as a specially related set of powers of capacities, I argue against this view on the grounds that the plausible options for reconciling the claim that the soul is a set of powers with Aristotle's repeated claim that the soul is an actuality cannot be unsuccessful. Moreover, I argue that there are good reasons to be wary of attributing to Aristotle the view that the soul (...)
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  39. Tomasza Wiltona Quaestio disputata de anima intellectiva: Wste̜p krytyczny i wydanie tekstu.Thomas Wylton - 1964 - [Warszawa: Państwowe Wydawn. Naukowe. Edited by Władysław[From Old Catalog] SeńKo.
     
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  40.  4
    Zum Problem der Traditionsaneignung bei Aristoteles: untersucht am Beispiel von "De anima" I.Marco Danieli - 1983 - Königstein/Ts.: A. Hain.
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  41.  11
    Aristotle's De anima, Books II and III (with certain passages from Book I). Aristotle - 1968 - Oxford,: Clarendon P.. Edited by D. W. Hamlyn.
  42.  12
    Corpo divino e musicale La negazione ‘estetica' dell'anima tra IV e I secolo a. C.Enrico Piergiacomi - 2017 - Società Degli Individui 57:123-136.
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  43. "Self-Knowledge and the Science of the Soul in Buridan's Quaestiones De Anima".Susan Brower-Toland - 2017 - In Gyula Klima (ed.), Questions on the soul by John Buridan and others. Berlin, Germany: Springer.
    Buridan holds that the proper subject of psychology (i.e., the science undertaken in Aristotle’s De Anima) is the soul, its powers, and characteristic functions. But, on his view, the science of psychology should not be understood as including the body nor even the soul-body composite as its proper subject. Rather its subject is just “the soul in itself and its powers and functions insofar as they stand on the side of the soul". Buridan takes it as obvious that, even (...)
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  44.  7
    Breve storia dell'anima.Gianfranco Ravasi - 2003 - Milano: Mondadori.
    Gianfranco Ravasi ha voluto "ripensare" ciò che era già stato indagato e meditato durante la lunga avventura del pensiero umano, a partire dalle culture primitive e dalle antiche civiltà. E ha analizzato le due sorgenti che alimentano il concetto occidentale di anima: le Sacre Scritture e la cultura greca, con i miti di Psiche e di Orfeo e pensatori come Platone, Aristotele e Plotino. Giunti alla fine di questa riflessione ci si rende conto che la storia dell'anima coincide (...)
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  45.  16
    Thomas Reid e l'anatomia della mente: i poteri dell'anima nella Scozia settecentesca.Sebastiano Gino - 2020 - Milano: Mimesis.
  46.  40
    Agostino, S., Dialoghi I: La controversia accademica. La felicità. L’ordine. I soliloqui. L’immortalità dell’anima. Introduzione, traduzione e note a cura di Domenico Gentili. [REVIEW]P. G. - 1971 - Augustinianum 11 (1):212-215.
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  47.  28
    Soul, Parts of the Soul, and the Definition of the Vegetative Capacity in Aristotle’s De anima.Klaus Corcilius - 2021 - In Fabrizio Baldassarri & Andreas Blank (eds.), Vegetative Powers: The Roots of Life in Ancient, Medieval and Early Modern Natural Philosophy. Cham: Springer. pp. 13-34.
    The aim of this chapter is to explain Aristotle’s definition of the vegetative part of the soul in the De anima from a methodological point of view. I discuss Aristotle’s conception of the soul and his conception of “parts of the soul” before I turn to his definition of the vegetative part of the soul in De anima II 4. I argue that the definition of the vegetative capacity is deliberately abstract so as to cover its various activities (...)
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  48.  84
    Scrivere nell'anima: verita, dialettica e persuasione in Platone, and: Oralita e scrittura in Platone (review).Francisco J. González - 2000 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 38 (2):269-271.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Scrivere nell'anima: verità, dialettica e persuasione in Platone; and: Oralità e scrittura in PlatoneFrancisco J. GonzalezFranco Trabattoni. Scrivere nell'anima: verità, dialettica e persuasione in Platone. Firenze: La Nouva Italia Editrice, 1994. Pp. 396. Paper, 24000 Lire.Franco Trabattoni. Oralità e scrittura in Platone. Milano: Università Degli Studi di Milano, 1999. Pp. 125. Paper, 16000 Lire.Trabattoni's masterful 1994 book, which the shorter 1999 book supplements in important ways, (...)
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  49.  9
    Dialettica, genere e anima nel commento di Alessandro di Afrodisia al IV libro dei "Topici" di Aristotele: introduzione, saggi di commento, traduzione e note.Chiara Militello - 2017 - Milano: Vita e pensiero. Edited by Alexander.
    Il volume comprede una serie di saggi sui passi più significativi del commento di Alessandro di Afrodisia al IV libro dei Topici di Aristotele. In particolare, i saggi sono dedicati ai seguenti tre argomenti, su cui Alessandro espone tesi estremamente interessanti. Il primo tratta la dialettica, cioè l'argomento dei Topici; segue poi il genere, che costituisce l'argomento del IL libro in particolare; infine l'anima, le discussioni intorno alla quale costituiscono per il commentatore un esempio privilegiato per illustare i "luoghi" (...)
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  50. Actuality, Potentiality and De Anima II.5.Robert Heinaman - 2007 - Phronesis 52 (2):139-187.
    Myles Burnyeat has argued that in De Anima II.5 Aristotle marks out a refined kind of alteration which is to be distinguished from ordinary alteration, change of quality as defined in Physics III.1-3. Aristotle's aim, he says, is to make it clear that perception is an alteration of this refined sort and not an ordinary alteration. Thus, it both supports his own interpretation of Aristotle's view of perception, and refutes the Sorabji interpretation according to which perception is a composite (...)
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