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Mind and World in Aristotle's De Anima
This innovative new reading of Aristotle's De Anima sheds new light on a most important and difficult ancient philosophical text.
Sean Kelsey (Author)
9781108832915, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 16 December 2021
240 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 1.3 cm, 0.435 kg
'Nearly all of Aristotle is hard. But the ideas and texts at the heart of this book are some of the hard hards. I learned much reading it. This book is a worthy addition to the growing literature on Aristotle's De Anima.' Evan Keeling, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Why is the human mind able to perceive and understand the truth about reality; that is, why does it seem to be the mind's specific function to know the world? Sean Kelsey argues that both the question itself and the way Aristotle answers it are key to understanding his work De Anima, a systematic philosophical account of the soul and its powers. In this original reading of a familiar but highly compressed text, Kelsey shows how this question underpins Aristotle's inquiry into the nature of soul, sensibility, and intelligence. He argues that, for Aristotle, the reason why it is in human nature to know beings is that 'the soul in a way is all beings'. This new perspective on the De Anima throws fresh and interesting light on familiar Aristotelian doctrines: for example, that sensibility is a kind of ratio (logos), or that the intellect is simple, separate, and unmixed.
Introduction
Part I. Questions: 1. Objectives
2. Problems
3. Solutions
Part II. Angles: 4. Affinities
5. Measures
Part III. Proposals: 6. Sensibility
7. Intelligibility
8. Intelligence
Conclusion.
Subject Areas: Philosophy of mind [HPM], Philosophy: metaphysics & ontology [HPJ], Western philosophy: Ancient, to c 500 [HPCA]