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Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (Clarendon Aristotle Series Cas)
 
 
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Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (Clarendon Aristotle Series Cas) [Paperback]

Martha C. Nussbaum (Editor), Amï¿1/2lie Oksenberg Rorty (Editor)
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Book Description

Clarendon Aristotle Series Cas December 21, 1995
Bringing together a group of outstanding new essays on Aristotle's De Anima, this book covers topics such as the relation between soul and body, sense-perception, imagination, memory, desire, and thought, which present the philosophical substance of Aristotle's views to the modern reader. The contributors write with philosophical subtlety and wide-ranging scholarship, locating their interpretations firmly within the context of Aristotle's thought as a whole.

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Customers buy this book with Aristotle: On the Soul. Parva Naturalia. On Breath. (Loeb Classical Library No. 288) $22.45

Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (Clarendon Aristotle Series Cas) + Aristotle: On the Soul. Parva Naturalia. On Breath. (Loeb Classical Library No. 288)


Editorial Reviews

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"Without doubt a valuable collection of fine essays well representative of the range of topics in Aristotle's De Anima."--Bryn Mawr Classical Review


About the Author

Martha C. Nussbaum is at Brown University. Amelie Oksenberg Rorty is at Mount Holyoke College.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA (December 21, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 019823600X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0198236009
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #159,311 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Martha C. Nussbaum is the Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, appointed in Law, Philosophy, and Divinity.

Author photo by Robin Holland

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars A first rate collection of essays, January 8, 2012
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This review is from: Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (Clarendon Aristotle Series Cas) (Paperback)
This collection of essays (the 1997 paperback edition) includes works by excellent scholars and covers the full range of issues raised by this first imperfect attempt at a philosophy of "mind." The Introduction by the editors succinctly summarizes the De Anima and contemporary issues of interpretation. I have very much enjoyed the essay by Charles Kahn, "Aristotle of Thinking," which elucidates the brief passages of De Anima with citations from other Aristotle works and discusses its relation with Descartes and current philosophical practice. Michael Frede's "On Aristotle's Conception of the Soul" and K V Wilkes' "Psuche versus the Mind" are two other intriguing essays that clarify Aristotle with reference to current philosophical discussion. I have read the Loeb translation and the very good discussion in Guthrie's Aristotle: An Encounter, and am very pleased to be able to explore the provocative and accessible essays of this collection. I began my study of De Anima to be able to understand Plotinus (and Emillson's excellent Plotinus on Sense-Perception.) I view this collection as an essential addition to my library on philosophy, as well as the best available guide to De Anima. It should be useful to serious students of Aristotle and classical philosophy, who are studying on their own, as well graduate students and genuine philosophers.
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0 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars All Humans Desire To Know, May 9, 2008
This review is from: Essays on Aristotle's De Anima (Clarendon Aristotle Series Cas) (Paperback)
I read these works for a graduate seminar on Aristotle.

Soul- De Anima Latin for Greek word Psuche=Life. It is a Phenomenology of Life. Living things are Aristotle¡¦s primary interest. Renee Descartes says thinking is only aspect of soul, not life. For Descartes the soul is the mind. Aristotle classifies features of living things. A soul can¡¦t be a body, (like a corpse). Psuche=life is a living form of the body, the phenomenon of life. Capacity to live is what he means. Ergon=function or work, thus when he talks about soul it is a body¡¦s function. Thus, a corpse is a deactivated body. Dunamis=capacity, Energia= actuality, thus both words are active words and can be seen as ¡§activating capacity.¡¨ Like a builder while building a house, past potential but not actual until the house is complete.
Entelecheia=¡¨living things have their ends inside them.¡¨ A living being has an end in itself.

What is the soul? Psuche= soul is being working toward ends of a self-moving body having the capacity to live. This is another way of talking about desire (like an animal that is hungry). Desire-animals have this as we do. Orexis=desire. The phenomenology of desire is to be motivated towards something that is lacking at the time, hunger, etc. Pleasure and pain.
Desire and action there are 3 kinds of desire.

1. Appetite like hunger and sex.
2. Emotion-like love not on crude level as appetite.
3. Wish-desire of the mind, (I want a good job).

All three strive towards something that is lacking. ¡§Desire is movement of the soul.¡¨ Human life is a set of desires. Human desires are more complicated. Desires clash like dieting and appetite.

¡§All humans desire to know.¡¨ This is the first line of the Metaphysics. Knowledge examined in terms of distinction between matter and form, perception has to do with intelligible form. Perception takes in visible form of something without the matter. Like imagination, an animal and human can do this. All knowledge starts with perception thus memory. Ultimate knowledge is intelligible form from visible form but mind is also using abstractions, this is a human capacity only. Humans use language to do this. Animals have image of a cat, word ¡§cat¡¨ is an abstraction for us. True knowledge organizes language.

Seing<³being seen. Two beings, seer and seen, this is act of vision it is only one actuality and two potentialities. In effect, Aristotle is saying that the capacity to see can only be actualized by seeing something. However, he goes the other way as well; something seeable only actualizes its seeability by being seen. One actuality, two potentials, the potential to see, the potential to be seen. In the modern world since Descartes, it is spoken as two actualities, the mind, and the outside world and there is a split between the two, two actualities, the mind as a separate thing and the object as a separate thing being seen. This is the source of the classic problem of skepticism. When there is seeing obviously you have two beings, the seer and the seen, but the act of vision is one actuality. Aristotle does not have this skeptical problem because he seems to stipulate this idea of single actuality and the whole point of the capacity to know is meant to hook up with things known. The whole point of knowable things is to be known by knower¡¦s, that is what he means by one actuality, thus there is no split between the mind and the world. There is no purely inside and outside. It isn¡¦t that minds are in here and the world is out there, and we might wonder about how they hook up. The nature of things and the nature of the mind are meant to hook up. Thus, Aristotle is not a radical skeptic like Descartes or Hume. Act of seeing the desk is joint actuality of seer and seen.

Actual hearing and actual sounding occur at the same time. Berkeley¡¦s famous question¡K¡¨If a tree falls in the forest and there is no one there to hear it, does it make a sound? For Berkeley, to be is to be perceived. Aristotle answers Berkeley¡¦s question that it does make a sound, but you have to have the capacity to hear, it is a joint venture. The mind and the world are not separated like for Descartes. Aristotle doesn¡¦t buy the idea that ¡§everything in my mind can be false¡¨ like the skeptics argue, Aristotle would say this is impossible. Getting things true and false are part of what the mind has to do, but the possibility that the whole mental realm could be put into question is impossible. Thus, he doesn¡¦t have to answer the question put to skeptics. ¡§If you are right that there is a radical doubt about the possibility of our knowledge hooking up with reality, why would the human situation ever come to pass in this way that it is possible that we could be totally wrong.¡¨ The skeptics answer we are not sure that we are wrong, they are saying we can¡¦t be sure that we are right. If that were the case then Aristotle can say, well is this a recipe for the human condition? One can be skeptical about this or that, but not about everything.

Aristotle moves from perception to thought. The thinking of the world and world to be thought is actualization. Nous=highest capacity of intellect for Aristotle. Mind is potential and until it thinks isn¡¦t actualization. The implication of this the world wants to be known according to Aristotle. The world also activates our desire. One actualization of two potentialities. Taking in form without matter that is what knowledge is. A knowing soul cannot be separation from the body. The mind has built in capacity to understand for Aristotle, no actual knowledge until intellect engages with objects. ¡§Actually thinking mind is the thing that it thinks. In this respect the soul is all existing things.¡¨ Soul is capacity to think the world in the passage.

I recommend Aristotle¡¦s works to anyone interested in obtaining a classical education, and those interested in philosophy. Aristotle is one of the most important philosophers and the standard that all others must be judged by.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
LIKE most other works of Aristotle, the De Anima survives in a relatively large number of manuscripts; but none of these is earlier than the tenth century AD. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
compositional flesh, exercising smell, deliberative phantasia, passible intellect, destruction simpliciter, literal coloration, homonymy principle, homoiomerous parts, receiving form without matter, functional flesh, nous poiétikos, tés hulés, human psuché, single mover, functionally defined parts, incidental sensibles, noetic domain, weak commensurability, ensouled matter, practical nous, internal mover, material intellect, distinguishing generation, first potentiality, first actuality
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Parva Naturalia, Richard Sorabji, Thomas Aquinas, Myles Burnyeat, Frank Baum, Martha Nussbaum, Michael Frede, Cognitive Role of Phantasia, Cynthia Freeland, Definitional Question, Empirical Question, Julia Annas, Alexander Aphrodisiensis, Doctrine Two, Franz Brentano, Marc Cohen, Middle Ages, Posterior Analytics, Summa Theologiae, Burnyeat's Aristotle, Common Explanation, Deborah Modrak, Perhaps Aristotle
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