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Philosophical Psychology in Arabic Thought and the Latin Aristotelianism of the 13 th Century

López-Farjeat Luis Xavier, Tellkamp Jörg Alejandro, Bazán Bernardo Carlos, Black Deborah, Brenet Jean-Baptiste, Druart Marie-Thérèse, Fidora Alexander, Hackett Jeremiah, López-Farjeat Luis Xavier, McGinnis Jon, Taylor Richard C., Tellkamp Jörg Alejandro
Date de parution 09/04/2013
EAN: 9782711624614
Disponibilité Disponible chez l'éditeur
In the 13 th century many of the Latin doctrines of the soul, intellect and perception were heavily influenced by Arabic sources, being Avicenna and Averroes the most significant ones. Their reading of Aristotle’s De anima stresses either a more or l... Voir la description complète
Nom d'attributValeur d'attribut
Common books attribute
ÉditeurVRIN
Nombre de pages304
Langue du livreFrançais
AuteurLópez-Farjeat Luis Xavier, Tellkamp Jörg Alejandro, Bazán Bernardo Carlos, Black Deborah, Brenet Jean-Baptiste, Druart Marie-Thérèse, Fidora Alexander, Hackett Jeremiah, López-Farjeat Luis Xavier, McGinnis Jon, Taylor Richard C., Tellkamp Jörg Alejandro
FormatPaperback / softback
Type de produitLivre
Date de parution09/04/2013
Poids391 g
Dimensions (épaisseur x largeur x hauteur)1,80 x 13,50 x 21,50 cm
In the 13 th century many of the Latin doctrines of the soul, intellect and perception were heavily influenced by Arabic sources, being Avicenna and Averroes the most significant ones. Their reading of Aristotle’s De anima stresses either a more or less Neoplatonic conceptual framework or a return to the purported Peripatetic roots. This volume deals with the generation and transmission of the Aristotelian science of the soul from Arabic into Latin and, incidentally, into Hebrew. It becomes clear that Latin discussions, such as in Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas or Roger Bacon and John Duns Scotus, should be thought of as the result of the either affirmative incorporation and transformation of the Arabic-Aristotelian tradition or its rejection.The articles gathered in this volume showcase various facets of the Arabic and Latin philosophical psychology ranging from the Avicennian theories of vision, cogitation and musical awareness to Averroes’s relevance for a proper understanding of Aquinas’s early theory of the intellect as well as the structure of animal knowledge according to Albert the Great and Roger Bacon. Even though rooted in different theological and philosophical traditions, it is clear that the Arabic and Latin theories of the soul use a common Aristotelian language.