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Unmixing the intellect Aristotle on cognitive powers and bodily organs

In recent years the majority of scholarship on Aristotle's philosophy of mind has concentrated on his account of sensation and has generally sought to find in his ancient account insights applicable to contemporary materialistic explanations of mental life. Challenging cognitivist and functionalist interpretations, this volume argues that Aristotle believed the mind to be unmixed, or separate from the body. Through careful textual analysis of De Anima and other key texts, the author shows that the Greek philosopher made a clear distinction between perception-an activity realized in material se.

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  • "In recent years the majority of scholarship on Aristotle's philosophy of mind has concentrated on his account of sensation and has generally sought to find in his ancient account insights applicable to contemporary materialistic explanations of mental life. Challenging cognitivist and functionalist interpretations, this volume argues that Aristotle believed the mind to be unmixed, or separate from the body. Through careful textual analysis of De Anima and other key texts, the author shows that the Greek philosopher made a clear distinction between perception-an activity realized in material se."@en

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  • "History"
  • "History"@en
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  • "Unmixing the intellect Aristotle on cognitive powers and bodily organs"@en
  • "Unmixing the intellect Aristotle on the cognitive powers and bodily organs"@en
  • "Unmixing the intellect : Aristotle on cognitive powers and bodily organs"
  • "Unmixing the intellect : Aristotle on the cognitive powers and bodily organs"