"For that which acts is always superior to that which is affected, and the first principle to the matter.[Actual knowledge is identical with its object; but potential knowledge is prior in time in the individual but not prior even in time in general] ; and it is not the case that it sometimes thinks and at other times not. In separation it is just what it is, and this alone is immortal and eternal. (But we do not remember because this is unaffected whereas the passive intellect is perishable, and without this thinks nothing." — Aristotle, De Anima, 430a18, translated by D.W Hamlyn
To the thinking soul images serve as sense-perceptions (aisthemata). And when it asserts or denies good or bad, it avoids or pursues it. Hence the soul never thinks without an image. — ibid, 431a8
I would strongly advise against reading Maimonides. He probably had no access to Platonic texts and learned about Plato through Arabs like al-Farabi and Ibn Sina. He complained that there are so many parables in Plato's writing one can dispense with it and stick to Aristotle. The fact that he is held in high esteem by the likes of Leo Strauss speaks volumes. — Apollodorus
The Nag Hammadi Library. — Noble Dust
If we refer to Aristotelian terminology, and his effort to disambiguate the use of "cause", we'd see that the ratios would constitute the "formal cause". However, there is still a need for an "efficient cause", as the source of activity. Efficient cause is "cause" as we generally use it. We do not, in our common language use, refer to principles like ratios as causes. — Metaphysician Undercover
We should not ignore the fact that sometimes we are unaware of whether a name signifies the composite substance, or the actuality or shape, for example, whether "a house" signifies the composite, that is a covering made of bricks and stones laid in such-and-such a manner, or actuality or form, that is, a covering, whether a "line" signifies twoness in length or twoness, and whether an animal signifies a soul in a body or a soul; for it is the soul which is the substance of the actuality of a certain body. The name "an animal" may also be applied to both, not as having the same the same formula when asserted of both, but a being related to one thing. But, although these distinctions contribute something to another inquiry, they contribute nothing to the inquiry of sensible substances, for the essence belongs to the form or actuality
For a soul and the essence of the soul are the same, but the essence of "a man" is not the same as a man, unless the soul is called "a man" accordingly, in some cases, a thing and its essence are the same, in others this is not so. — Aristotle, Metaphysics, translated by Hippocrates G Apostle, Book Eta, Chapter3
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It seems hard to separate conformation bias from appreciation of interesting ideas. — jgill
The thing about psychology (as opposed to other speculative enterprises like, say, evolutionary biology), is that one has to have a theory. We can't just postpone speculation until we've honed the method to a properly scientific one, we interact with other people all the time, we make decision which affect them. Every time we do this we do so on the basis of some theory about their psyche which dictates how we think they'll respond. So we can't do without psychology, we're all psychologists. It's just a question of whether we can do anything to even slightly improve the utility of our models. — Isaac
Maybe the suffering is the knowledge that things can be scarce and can always be taken away? — TiredThinker
Personal character was the engine of ideas, and Socrates found in this participation the engine of reality itself. — Gary M Washburn
But the character of that participation is neither one thing nor the other. It is, rather, the personal discipline and drama by which each is recognizably not the other. The act of being that drama is the articulation of the person of that discipline. The personal character each of us brings to the recognition of terms separates subject and predicate from each other in the person of that discipline. Reason is personal, not an impersonal mechanics. — Gary M Washburn
1. How have you arrived at your belief that God exists? Was it after some theoretical or logical proofs on God 's existence or some personal religious experience? Or via some other routes? — Corvus
Can or ought this be done through psychology, why or why not? — Shawn
But if a broadening lexicon of terms is the entailed result of conserving them, then we can hardly claim this mere sentiment or deny the growing lexicon we share is any less rigorously achieved than the discipline of conserving our premises. — Gary M Washburn
The High Court has been staked with Christian conservatives. — Tom Storm