Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Lesson 22: The Three Acts of the Mind. Supplements the Course Video: ... (Aquinas 101: Course 2 - Introduction to Thomistic Philosophy) with any podcast app to access all your course listening on the go. Course Reading. Selection from Commentary on the Posterior Analytics | St. Thomas Aquinas.

  2. As de Libera has noted, Aquinas’s theory of soul is partly responsible for the thirteenth-century shift towards the notion of subject-as-agent.2 A parallel development, however, takes place in Aquinas’s account of the way in which I experience myself, not as a pure “mind” or “self,” but as a first-person agent-in-act.

  3. Aquinas on being. Anthony Kenny - 2002 - New York: Oxford University Press. Aquinas on mind , by Anthony Kenny. New York: Routledge, 1995, pp. 182. $13.95 (paper). Gyula Klima - manuscript. Review of Anthony Kenny, Charles Kenny, Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Utility: Happiness in Philosophical and Economic Thought.

  4. Psychology and Mind in Aquinas. Miguel Garcia-Valdecasas - 2005 - History of Psychiatry 16 (3):291-310. Anthony Kenny, Aquinas on Mind. [REVIEW] Murdith Mclean - 1995 - Philosophy in Review 15:48-50. Aquinas on Mind. Robert Pasnau - 1994 - Philosophical Review 103 (4):745. Analytics. Added to PP 2017-02-21 Downloads

  5. St. Augustine’s philosophical reflections on the nature of the mind and body begin with his realization of the intuitive undeniability of the personal mind, an inductive realization of the thinking self, and a diminished view of the physical body. This point marks the beginning of a critical debate within Augustinian philosophy.

  6. Aquinas on mind , by Anthony Kenny. New York: Routledge, 1995, pp. 182. $13.95 (paper). Gyula Klima - manuscript. ... The Avicennan Sources for Aquinas on Being: Supplemental Remarks to Brian Davies’ “Kenny on Aquinas on Being”. Jon McGinnis - 2005 - Modern Schoolman 82 (2):131-142.

  7. 4 de ene. de 2002 · This book shows how the mature writings of Thomas Aquinas though written in the thirteenth century have much to offer the human mind and the relationship between intellect and will, body and soul.