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John Buridan's Questions on Aristotl...
Klima, Gyula.

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  • John Buridan's Questions on Aristotle's de Anima -- Iohannis Buridani quaestiones in Aristotelis de Anima
  • 紀錄類型: 書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
    正題名/作者: John Buridan's Questions on Aristotle's de Anima -- Iohannis Buridani quaestiones in Aristotelis de Anima/ by Gyula Klima ... [et al.].
    其他作者: Klima, Gyula.
    出版者: Cham :Springer International Publishing : : 2023.,
    面頁冊數: 1 online resource (xxxix, 998 p.) :ill., digital ;24 cm.
    內容註: Part 1. Chapter 1. Is the proper subject of the science discussed in De anima the soul, the term 'soul', the living body, something else, or nothing? -- Chapter 2. Is all cognition counted among good things, that is to say, is all cognition good? -- Chapter 3. Is all knowledge honorable? -- Chapter 4. Is the science of the soul one of the most difficult sciences? -- Chapter 5. Is a universal nothing or posterior? -- Chapter 6 Do accidents contribute a great deal towards cognizing what something is? -- Part 2 -- Chapter 7. Is every soul a substantial act? -- Chapter 8. Is every soul the first act of an organic body? -- Chapter 9. Is the definition of the soul which says that the soul is the first substantial act of an organic physical body that has life in potency a good definition? -- Chapter 10. Are the vegetative and sensitive souls the same in an animal? -- Chapter 11. Are the powers of the soul distinct from the soul itself? -- Chapter 12. Should the powers of the soul be distinguished by their acts or objects? -- Chapter 13. Is the whole soul in every part of the animate body? -- Chapter 14. Is it the most natural operation of living things to generate their like? -- Chapter 15. Is sense a passive power? -- Chapter 16. Is an agent sense necessary in order to sense? -- Chapter 17. Can sense be deceived about a sensible proper to it? -- Chapter 18 -- Are common sensibles per se sensible? -- Chapter 19. Are number, magnitude, shape, motion and rest common, per se sensibles? -- Chapter 20. Is color the proper object of sight? -- Chapter 21. Do we need illumination to see color because of the color or because of the medium? -- Chapter 22. When I speak, do each of you hear the same sound? -- Chapter 23. Is odor is propagated through a medium in its real being, or in its spiritual or intentional being? -- Chapter 24. Do the species of proper and per se sensible qualities have instantaneous generation and propagation in the medium, or in the organ of sense? -- Chapter 25. Is touch one sense or several? -- Chapter 26. Are there only five external senses? -- Chapter 27. Does a sensible object placed on a sense produce sensation? That is, is it sensed? -- Chapter 28. Is it necessary to postulate a single common sense? -- Chapter 29. Is it necessary to posit other internal senses in addition to the common sense? -- Chapter 30. Is the organ of common sense in the heart or in the brain or in the head (for it is not taken to be anywhere else)? -- Chapter 31. Does actual sensation take place in the external senses as in a subject, or only the reception of sensible species, with sensation taking place only in the heart? -- Part 3. Chapter 32. Is the human intellect a passive power as regards an intelligible object? -- Chapter 33. Must the intellect be devoid of what it understands? -- Chapter 34. Is the human intellect the substantial form of the human body? -- Chapter 35. Is the human intellect a form inhering in the human body? -- Chapter 36. Is there a unique intellect by which all humans understand when they are thinking? -- Chapter 37. Is the human intellect everlasting? -- Chapter 38. Is the possible intellect pure potency in the sense that it is not any kind of actuality, just like prime matter? -- Chapter 39. Does the intellect understand the universal before the singular, or vice versa? -- Chapter 40. Can the human intellect understand itself? -- Chapter 41. Is the active contribution of an agent intellect, apart from the possible intellect, necessary for a human being's act of understanding? -- Chapter 42. Is the intellectual act or even its habit the same as the intellective soul, or a thing added to it? -- Chapter 43. Is every simple act of thinking true? -- Chapter 44. Can a non-being be understood? -- Chapter 45. Is a point represented or understood as a privation? -- Chapter 46. Does the intellect preserve intelligible species once the actual act of thinking has ceased?. Chapter 47. Can the human intellect understand more than one thing at once? -- Chapter 48. Does the intellective soul in a human being differ from the sensitive soul? -- Chapter 49. Is one appetite contrary to another in a human being? -- Chapter 50. Does nature do anything in vain, or is it even sometimes deficient in what is necessary? -- Chapter 51. Is the locomotive power the vegetative, sensitive, intellective, appetitive, or some other power of the soul besides these?.
    Contained By: Springer Nature eBook
    標題: Philosophy of mind. -
    電子資源: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-94433-9
    ISBN: 9783030944339
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