As Aristotelians and Thomists use the term, intellect is that faculty by which we grasp abstract concepts (like the concepts man and mortal), put them together into judgments (like the judgment that all men are mortal), and reason logically from one judgment to another (as when we reason from all men are mortal and Socrates is a man to the conclusion that Socrates is mortal). It is to be distinguished from imagination, the faculty by which we form mental images (such as a visual mental image of what your mother looks like, an auditory mental image of what your favorite song sounds like, a gustatory mental image of what pizza tastes like, and so forth); and from sensation, the faculty by which we perceive the goings on in the external material world and the internal world of the body (such as a visual experience of the computer in front of you, the auditory experience of the cars passing by on the street outside your window, the awareness you have of the position of your legs, etc.)
In Aristotelian philosophy, nous is the basic understanding or awareness that allows humans 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. For him then, discussion of nous is connected 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.
Like Macbeth, Western man made an evil decision, which has become the efficient and final cause of other evil decisions. Have we forgotten our encounter with the witches on the heath? It occurred in the late fourteenth century, and what the witches said to the protagonist of this drama was that man could realize himself more fully if he would only abandon his belief in the existence of transcendentals. The powers of darkness were working subtly, as always, and they couched this proposition in the seemingly innocent form of an attack upon universals. The defeat of logical realism in the great medieval debate was the crucial event in the history of Western culture; from this flowed those acts which issue now in modern decadence. — Richard Weaver, Ideas have Consequences
Descriptions are actual material objects. — jkop
I get what you're trying to do – reduce the abstract to the concrete. It ain't gonna work. — Pneumenon
Any actual set that exemplifies the description.If we both use the same description, which set of physical events is the description? — Pneumenon
If we both use the same description, which set of physical events is the description?
— Pneumenon
Any actual set that exemplifies the description.
— jkop
Circular definition.
Again, it's not gonna work. — Pneumenon
What definition? Above I reply to your question. — jkop
we recognize these words that we type by some (but not all) features that they possess — jkop
And each of them probably starts by defining in some way what they're talking about, and then the substance is in the details. But with each we can ask both why not and why. There is no such thing as anything except as we call it so, usually for reasons good and sufficient for ourselves. Or in short, reason and being are joined at the hip, and fatal to chop them apart.The history of Western philosophy contains many schools of thought that attempt to argue against the existence of ideas. — Pneumenon
On the one hand, it doesn’t seem like there could be, but on the other, it seems impossible there isn’t. — Mww
What began quite nobely as an attempt to understand some of human psychology, by limiting itself to what could be observed - we cannot see into another person's mind - somehow morphed into the view that there is no mind or mental. — Manuel
whose bright idea was it to get rid of ideas anyway? — Mww
It would be nice to see these ideas brought to bear too, because I think a theory of pansemiosis needs to better clarify what is unique in life, and what is not so unique, but rather builds on the nature of non-living systems. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Don’t you think behaviourism was reductionist from the outset? That it was basically a Procrustean bed - because the mind couldn’t be observed, and science built around observation, then it has to be excluded from consideration. (Dennett does say somewhere that his approach is basically behaviourist.) — Wayfarer
As to how physics comes into consideration - isn’t it the case that modern mathematical physics is grounded in the quantisation of measurable attributes of bodies? And that this was then taken as paradigmatic for all manner of science, culminating in what René Guenon describes as ‘the reign of quantity’? Then only what is measurable is considered significant. And furthermore the paradigm assumes the separation of observer and observed - something which has been found to be untenable in quantum physics. — Wayfarer
…..were abandoned in the late medieval period…. — Wayfarer
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