Aristotle’s Psychology: The Nature of the Soul, Sense Perception and Thought by Leonard Peikoff18/50
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ธ.ค. 2024
- History of Philosophy by Leonard Peikoff - Lesson 18 of 50
Course playlist: • History of Philosophy ...
What is the soul? How is it connected with the phenomenon of life? By what means are we aware of the world around us? Leonard Peikoff discusses Aristotle’s answers to these questions and explains his defense of the validity of the senses as well as his unique conception of the intellect.
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It is the nature of Life, the All in One in All, to function/serve as a diversified unity of infinite potential, eternally actualizing as a unified diversity or Uni-verse.
Be still and know that I am, you are, we are - simply being aware of being aware - as Life at Large - eternally actualizing infinite potential, because only Eternity can fully embrace Infinity.
Incoherent bs
💘
nice
11:56
It seems to me that psūche would translate to psyche rather than soul?
Not all cognates have the same meaning. Psuche is life force, that which gives the body animation. This is soul.
So good until the very end where he gives into his base appetite and slanders the church. That was just a downright lazy attack on early Christian interaction with Plato and Aristotle
A dishonest rep of Aristotle. Then I saw any rand and it made sense.