I have no idea what it meant to a then native speaker. — tim wood
In use it refers to or implies much of what a mind might do or contain.
I am unaware of any reference in Ancient Greek to anything like modern intelligence. And subject to correction, I don't think there are any. — tim wood
If the point of the thread is between a Greek and a modern thought, you shall have to at least wear yourself out, and the patience of all readers, with carefully expressed understandings, with references, within which being done, likely all questions will either be answered or dissolved.I mean, over time the Greek nous, has come to mean, at least philosophically, as mind or intellect. — Shawn
I opine here that the Greek mind was all about qualities, thus in a sense given as such, with a host of other qualities that men might have. — tim wood
In the Aristotelian scheme, nous is the basic understanding or awareness that allows human beings to think rationally. For Aristotle, this was distinct from the processing of sensory perception, including the use of imagination and memory, which other animals can do. This therefore connects discussion of nous to discussion of how the human mind sets definitions in a consistent and communicable way, and whether people must be born with some innate potential to understand the same universal categories in the same logical ways. Deriving from this it was also sometimes argued, especially in classical and medieval philosophy, that the individual nous must require help of a spiritual and divine type. By this type of account, it came to be argued that the human understanding (nous) somehow stems from this cosmic nous, which is however not just a recipient of order, but a creator of it.
Just a passing thought; but, if intelligence is what Plato called nous, then is its modern assessment defined by psychometrics testing, as IQ? — Shawn
I don’t believe that is correct. The root ‘gn-‘ is found in ‘gnosis’ and the Sanskrit ‘Jñāna’ but according to etymology online ‘nous’ is a separate root meaning ‘mind’ or ‘intellect’. — Wayfarer
Étymologie: R. Γνω connaître ; cf. γιγνώσκω.
More recently, νοῦς has been linked with νέομαι and νόστος (to return, the return) and derived ultimately from the Indo-European root *nes, meaning 'a return from death and darkness'. On this view, νοῦς arises out of the religious conception of the return to conscious life.
but, if intelligence is what Plato called nous — Shawn
For us, it only remains to theorize and interpret about their texts, since, for the true understanding of classical Greek metaphysics, one has to think like an ancient Greek, something that is no longer possible. — Gus Lamarch
The ancients seem to have had the same belief about Athena as the interpreters of Homer have now; for most of these, in commenting on the poet, say that he represents Athena as mind (νοῦς) and intellect (διάνοια); and the maker of her name seems to have had a similar conception of her, but he gives her the still grander title of “mind of God” ἡ θεοῦ νόησις, seeming to say that she is a ἁ θεονόα … he may have called her Theonoe because she has unequalled knowledge of divine things (τὰ θεῖα νοοῦσα) … Perhaps, too, he may have wished to identify the goddess with wisdom of character (ἐν ἤθει νόησις)by calling her Ethonoe (Crat. 407a-c).
Perhaps, too, he may have wished to identify the goddess with wisdom of character (ἐν ἤθει νόησις)by calling her Ethonoe (Crat. 407a-c).
Perhaps he is saying "wisdom of character' = ethos. — Gary M Washburn
Then what of sophia? — Gary M Washburn
It's easy to forget that from about 300 CE to at least the seventeenth century education was explicitly ideological. In my youth I was taught to write in Latin syntax, or else. the idea of intelligence is very much a hangover of that tradition. — Gary M Washburn
Socrates here seems to equate nous with knowledge and wisdom. Elsewhere he says that the nous remembers, etc. — Apollodorus
In other words, for a thousand years the terms in question were discussed in Latin as Latin terms, not Greek at all. — Gary M Washburn
In any case, "Nous" would most likely be better synthesized contemporarily by the creation of a new term that encompasses "mind/intellect/reason" and "tradition/common sense". — Gus Lamarch
In any case, "Nous" would most likely be better synthesized contemporarily by the creation of a new term that encompasses "mind/intellect/reason" and "tradition/common sense". — Gus Lamarch
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