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Nous

Nous, or Greek νοῦς (UK: /ns/,[1] US: /ns/), sometimes equated to intellect or intelligence, is a concept from classical philosophy for the faculty of the human mind necessary for understanding what is true or real.[2]

This diagram shows the medieval understanding of spheres of the cosmos, derived from Aristotle, and as per the standard explanation by Ptolemy. It came to be understood that at least the outermost sphere (marked "Primũ Mobile") has its own intellect, intelligence or nous – a cosmic equivalent to the human mind.

Alternative English terms used in philosophy include "understanding" and "mind"; or sometimes "thought" or "reason" (in the sense of that which reasons, not the activity of reasoning).[3][4] It is also often described as something equivalent to perception except that it works within the mind ("the mind's eye").[5] It has been suggested that the basic meaning is something like "awareness".[6] In colloquial British English, nous also denotes "good sense",[1] which is close to one everyday meaning it had in Ancient Greece. The nous performed a role comparable to the modern concept of intuition.

In Aristotle's influential works, which are the main source of later philosophical meanings, nous was carefully distinguished from sense perception, imagination, and reason, although these terms are closely inter-related. The term was apparently already singled out by earlier philosophers such as Parmenides, whose works are largely lost. In post-Aristotelian discussions, the exact boundaries between perception, understanding of perception, and reasoning have not always agreed with the definitions of Aristotle, even though his terminology remains influential.

In the Aristotelian scheme, nous is the basic understanding or awareness that allows human beings to think rationally. For Aristotle, this was distinct from the processing of sensory perception, including the use of imagination and memory, which other animals can do. For him then, discussion of nous is connected to discussion of how the human mind sets definitions in a consistent and communicable way, and whether people must be born with some innate potential to understand the same universal categories in the same logical ways. Derived from this it was also sometimes argued, in classical and medieval philosophy, that the individual nous must require help of a spiritual and divine type. By this type of account, it also came to be argued that the human understanding (nous) somehow stems from this cosmic nous, which is however not just a recipient of order, but a creator of it. Such explanations were influential in the development of medieval accounts of God, the immortality of the soul, and even the motions of the stars, in Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, amongst both eclectic philosophers and authors representing all the major faiths of their times.

Pre-Socratic usage edit

 
The earliest surviving text that uses the word nous is the Iliad. Agamemnon says to Achilles: "Do not thus, mighty though you are, godlike Achilles, seek to deceive me with your wit (nous); for you will not get by me nor persuade me."[7]

In early Greek uses, Homer used nous to signify mental activities of both mortals and immortals, for example what they really have on their mind as opposed to what they say aloud. It was one of several words related to thought, thinking, and perceiving with the mind. In pre-Socratic philosophy, it became increasingly distinguished as a source of knowledge and reasoning opposed to mere sense perception or thinking influenced by the body such as emotion. For example, Heraclitus complained that "much learning does not teach nous".[8]

Among some Greek authors, a faculty of intelligence known as a "higher mind" came to be considered as a property of the cosmos as a whole. The work of Parmenides set the scene for Greek philosophy to come, and the concept of nous was central to his radical proposals. He claimed that reality as perceived by the senses alone is not a world of truth at all, because sense perception is so unreliable, and what is perceived is so uncertain and changeable. Instead he argued for a dualism wherein nous and related words (the verb for thinking which describes its mental perceiving activity, noein, and the unchanging and eternal objects of this perception, noēta) describe another form of perception which is not physical, but intellectual only, distinct from sense perception and the objects of sense perception.

 
Anaxagoras

Anaxagoras, born about 500 BC, is the first person who is definitely known to have explained the concept of a nous (mind), which arranged all other things in the cosmos in their proper order, started them in a rotating motion, and continuing to control them to some extent, having an especially strong connection with living things. (However Aristotle reports an earlier philosopher, Hermotimus of Clazomenae, who had taken a similar position.[9]) Amongst the pre-Socratic philosophers before Anaxagoras, other philosophers had proposed a similar ordering human-like principle causing life and the rotation of the heavens. For example, Empedocles, like Hesiod much earlier, described cosmic order and living things as caused by a cosmic version of love,[10] and Pythagoras and Heraclitus, attributed the cosmos with "reason" (logos).[11]

According to Anaxagoras the cosmos is made of infinitely divisible matter, every bit of which can inherently become anything, except Mind (nous), which is also matter, but which can only be found separated from this general mixture, or else mixed into living things, or in other words in the Greek terminology of the time, things with a soul (psychē).[12] Anaxagoras wrote:

All other things partake in a portion of everything, while nous is infinite and self-ruled, and is mixed with nothing, but is alone, itself by itself. For if it were not by itself, but were mixed with anything else, it would partake in all things if it were mixed with any; for in everything there is a portion of everything, as has been said by me in what goes before, and the things mixed with it would hinder it, so that it would have power over nothing in the same way that it has now being alone by itself. For it is the thinnest of all things and the purest, and it has all knowledge about everything and the greatest strength; and nous has power over all things, both greater and smaller, that have soul [psychē].[13]

Concerning cosmology, Anaxagoras, like some Greek philosophers already before him, believed the cosmos was revolving, and had formed into its visible order as a result of such revolving causing a separating and mixing of different types of chemical elements. Nous, in his system, originally caused this revolving motion to start, but it does not necessarily continue to play a role once the mechanical motion has started. His description was in other words (shockingly for the time) corporeal or mechanical, with the moon made of earth, the sun and stars made of red hot metal (beliefs Socrates was later accused of holding during his trial) and nous itself being a physically fine type of matter which also gathered and concentrated with the development of the cosmos. This nous (mind) is not incorporeal; it is the thinnest of all things. The distinction between nous and other things nevertheless causes his scheme to sometimes be described as a peculiar kind of dualism.[12]

Anaxagoras' concept of nous was distinct from later platonic and neoplatonic cosmologies in many ways, which were also influenced by Eleatic, Pythagorean and other pre-Socratic ideas, as well as the Socratics themselves.

Socratic philosophy edit

Xenophon edit

Xenophon, the less famous of the two students of Socrates whose written accounts of him have survived, recorded that he taught his students a kind of teleological justification of piety and respect for divine order in nature. This has been described as an "intelligent design" argument for the existence of God, in which nature has its own nous.[14] For example, in his Memorabilia 1.4.8, he describes Socrates asking a friend sceptical of religion, "Are you, then, of the opinion that intelligence (nous) alone exists nowhere and that you by some good chance seized hold of it, while—as you think—those surpassingly large and infinitely numerous things [all the earth and water] are in such orderly condition through some senselessness?" Later in the same discussion he compares the nous, which directs each person's body, to the good sense (phronēsis) of the god, which is in everything, arranging things to its pleasure (1.4.17).[15] Plato describes Socrates making the same argument in his Philebus 28d, using the same words nous and phronēsis.[16]

Plato edit

Plato used the word nous in many ways that were not unusual in the everyday Greek of the time, and often simply meant "good sense" or "awareness".[17] On the other hand, in some of his Platonic dialogues it is described by key characters in a higher sense, which was apparently already common. In his Philebus 28c he has Socrates say that "all philosophers agree—whereby they really exalt themselves—that mind (nous) is king of heaven and earth. Perhaps they are right." and later states that the ensuing discussion "confirms the utterances of those who declared of old that mind (nous) always rules the universe".[18]

In his Cratylus, Plato gives the etymology of Athena's name, the goddess of wisdom, from Atheonóa (Ἀθεονόα) meaning "god's (theos) mind (nous)". In his Phaedo, Plato's teacher Socrates is made to say just before dying that his discovery of Anaxagoras' concept of a cosmic nous as the cause of the order of things, was an important turning point for him. But he also expressed disagreement with Anaxagoras' understanding of the implications of his own doctrine, because of Anaxagoras' materialist understanding of causation. Socrates said that Anaxagoras would "give voice and air and hearing and countless other things of the sort as causes for our talking with each other, and should fail to mention the real causes, which are, that the Athenians decided that it was best to condemn me".[19] On the other hand, Socrates seems to suggest that he also failed to develop a fully satisfactory teleological and dualistic understanding of a mind of nature, whose aims represent the Good, which all parts of nature aim at.

Concerning the nous that is the source of understanding of individuals, Plato is widely understood to have used ideas from Parmenides in addition to Anaxagoras. Like Parmenides, Plato argued that relying on sense perception can never lead to true knowledge, only opinion. Instead, Plato's more philosophical characters argue that nous must somehow perceive truth directly in the ways gods and daimons perceive. What our mind sees directly in order to really understand things must not be the constantly changing material things, but unchanging entities that exist in a different way, the so-called "forms" or "ideas". However he knew that contemporary philosophers often argued (as in modern science) that nous and perception are just two aspects of one physical activity, and that perception is the source of knowledge and understanding (not the other way around).

Just exactly how Plato believed that the nous of people lets them come to understand things in any way that improves upon sense perception and the kind of thinking which animals have, is a subject of long running discussion and debate. On the one hand, in the Republic Plato's Socrates, in the Analogy of the sun and Allegory of the Cave describes people as being able to perceive more clearly because of something from outside themselves, something like when the sun shines, helping eyesight. The source of this illumination for the intellect is referred to as the Form of the Good. On the other hand, in the Meno for example, Plato's Socrates explains the theory of anamnesis whereby people are born with ideas already in their soul, which they somehow remember from previous lives. Both theories were to become highly influential.

As in Xenophon, Plato's Socrates frequently describes the soul in a political way, with ruling parts, and parts that are by nature meant to be ruled. Nous is associated with the rational (logistikon) part of the individual human soul, which by nature should rule. In his Republic, in the so-called "analogy of the divided line", it has a special function within this rational part. Plato tended to treat nous as the only immortal part of the soul.

Concerning the cosmos, in the Timaeus, the title character also tells a "likely story" in which nous is responsible for the creative work of the demiurge or maker who brought rational order to our universe. This craftsman imitated what he perceived in the world of eternal Forms. In the Philebus Socrates argues that nous in individual humans must share in a cosmic nous, in the same way that human bodies are made up of small parts of the elements found in the rest of the universe. And this nous must be in the genos of being a cause of all particular things as particular things.[20]

Aristotle edit

Like Plato, Aristotle saw the nous or intellect of an individual as somehow similar to sense perception but also distinct.[21] Sense perception in action provides images to the nous, via the "sensus communis" and imagination, without which thought could not occur. But other animals have sensus communis and imagination, whereas none of them have nous.[22] Aristotelians divide perception of forms into the animal-like one which perceives species sensibilis or sensible forms, and species intelligibilis that are perceived in a different way by the nous.

Like Plato, Aristotle linked nous to logos (reason) as uniquely human, but he also distinguished nous from logos, thereby distinguishing the faculty for setting definitions from the faculty that uses them to reason with.[23] In his Nicomachean Ethics, Book VI Aristotle divides the soul (psychē) into two parts, one which has reason and one which does not, but then divides the part which has reason into the reasoning (logistikos) part itself which is lower, and the higher "knowing" (epistēmonikos) part which contemplates general principles (archai). Nous, he states, is the source of the first principles or sources (archai) of definitions, and it develops naturally as people gain experience.[24] This he explains after first comparing the four other truth revealing capacities of soul: technical know how (technē), logically deduced knowledge (epistēmē, sometimes translated as "scientific knowledge"), practical wisdom (phronēsis), and lastly theoretical wisdom (sophia), which is defined by Aristotle as the combination of nous and epistēmē. All of these others apart from nous are types of reason (logos).

And intellect [nous] is directed at what is ultimate on both sides, since it is intellect and not reason [logos] that is directed at both the first terms [horoi] and the ultimate particulars, on the one side at the changeless first terms in demonstrations, and on the other side, in thinking about action, at the other sort of premise, the variable particular; for these particulars are the sources [archai] from which one discerns that for the sake of which an action is, since the universals are derived from the particulars. Hence intellect is both a beginning and an end, since the demonstrations that are derived from these particulars are also about these. And of these one must have perception, and this perception is intellect.[25]

Aristotle's philosophical works continue many of the same Socratic themes as his teacher Plato. Amongst the new proposals he made was a way of explaining causality, and nous is an important part of his explanation. As mentioned above, Plato criticized Anaxagoras' materialism, or understanding that the intellect of nature only set the cosmos in motion, but is no longer seen as the cause of physical events. Aristotle explained that the changes of things can be described in terms of four causes at the same time. Two of these four causes are similar to the materialist understanding: each thing has a material which causes it to be how it is, and some other thing which set in motion or initiated some process of change. But at the same time according to Aristotle each thing is also caused by the natural forms they are tending to become, and the natural ends or aims, which somehow exist in nature as causes, even in cases where human plans and aims are not involved. These latter two causes (the "formal" and "final") encompass the continuous effect of the intelligent ordering principle of nature itself. Aristotle's special description of causality is especially apparent in the natural development of living things. It leads to a method whereby Aristotle analyses causation and motion in terms of the potentialities and actualities of all things, whereby all matter possesses various possibilities or potentialities of form and end, and these possibilities become more fully real as their potential forms become actual or active reality (something they will do on their own, by nature, unless stopped because of other natural things happening). For example, a stone has in its nature the potentiality of falling to the earth and it will do so, and actualize this natural tendency, if nothing is in the way.

Aristotle analyzed thinking in the same way. For him, the possibility of understanding rests on the relationship between intellect and sense perception. Aristotle's remarks on the concept of what came to be called the "active intellect" and "passive intellect" (along with various other terms) are amongst "the most intensely studied sentences in the history of philosophy".[26] The terms are derived from a single passage in Aristotle's De Anima, Book III. Following is the translation of one of those passages[27] with some key Greek words shown in square brackets.

...since in nature one thing is the material [hulē] for each kind [genos] (this is what is in potency all the particular things of that kind) but it is something else that is the causal and productive thing by which all of them are formed, as is the case with an art in relation to its material, it is necessary in the soul [psychē] too that these distinct aspects be present;

the one sort is intellect [nous] by becoming all things, the other sort by forming all things, in the way an active condition [hexis] like light too makes the colors that are in potency be at work as colors [to phōs poiei ta dunamei onta chrōmata energeiai chrōmata].

This sort of intellect [which is like light in the way it makes potential things work as what they are] is separate, as well as being without attributes and unmixed, since it is by its thinghood a being-at-work [energeia], for what acts is always distinguished in stature above what is acted upon, as a governing source is above the material it works on.

Knowledge [epistēmē], in its being-at-work, is the same as the thing it knows, and while knowledge in potency comes first in time in any one knower, in the whole of things it does not take precedence even in time.

This does not mean that at one time it thinks but at another time it does not think, but when separated it is just exactly what it is, and this alone is deathless and everlasting (though we have no memory, because this sort of intellect is not acted upon, while the sort that is acted upon is destructible), and without this nothing thinks.

The passage tries to explain "how the human intellect passes from its original state, in which it does not think, to a subsequent state, in which it does" according to his distinction between potentiality and actuality.[26] Aristotle says that the passive intellect receives the intelligible forms of things, but that the active intellect is required to make the potential knowledge into actual knowledge, in the same way that light makes potential colours into actual colours. As Davidson remarks:

Just what Aristotle meant by potential intellect and active intellect - terms not even explicit in the De anima and at best implied - and just how he understood the interaction between them remains moot. Students of the history of philosophy continue to debate Aristotle's intent, particularly the question whether he considered the active intellect to be an aspect of the human soul or an entity existing independently of man.[26]

The passage is often read together with Metaphysics, Book XII, ch.7-10, where Aristotle makes nous as an actuality a central subject within a discussion of the cause of being and the cosmos. In that book, Aristotle equates active nous, when people think and their nous becomes what they think about, with the "unmoved mover" of the universe, and God: "For the actuality of thought (nous) is life, and God is that actuality; and the essential actuality of God is life most good and eternal."[28] Alexander of Aphrodisias, for example, equated this active intellect which is God with the one explained in De Anima, while Themistius thought they could not be simply equated. (See below.)

Like Plato before him, Aristotle believes Anaxagoras' cosmic nous implies and requires the cosmos to have intentions or ends: "Anaxagoras makes the Good a principle as causing motion; for Mind (nous) moves things, but moves them for some end, and therefore there must be some other Good—unless it is as we say; for on our view the art of medicine is in a sense health."[29]

In the philosophy of Aristotle the soul (psyche) of a body is what makes it alive, and is its actualized form; thus, every living thing, including plant life, has a soul. The mind or intellect (nous) can be described variously as a power, faculty, part, or aspect of the human soul. For Aristotle, soul and nous are not the same. He did not rule out the possibility that nous might survive without the rest of the soul, as in Plato, but he specifically says that this immortal nous does not include any memories or anything else specific to an individual's life. In his Generation of Animals Aristotle specifically says that while other parts of the soul come from the parents, physically, the human nous, must come from outside, into the body, because it is divine or godly, and it has nothing in common with the energeia of the body.[30] This was yet another passage which Alexander of Aphrodisias would link to those mentioned above from De Anima and the Metaphysics in order to understand Aristotle's intentions.

Post-Aristotelian classical theories edit

Until the early modern era, much of the discussion which has survived today concerning nous or intellect, in Europe, Africa and the Middle East, concerned how to correctly interpret Aristotle and Plato. However, at least during the classical period, materialist philosophies, more similar to modern science, such as Epicureanism, were still relatively common. The Epicureans believed that the bodily senses themselves were not the cause of error, but the interpretations can be. The term prolepsis was used by Epicureans to describe the way the mind forms general concepts from sense perceptions.

To the Stoics, more like Heraclitus than Anaxagoras, order in the cosmos comes from an entity called logos, the cosmic reason. But as in Anaxagoras this cosmic reason, like human reason but higher, is connected to the reason of individual humans. The Stoics however, did not invoke incorporeal causation, but attempted to explain physics and human thinking in terms of matter and forces. As in Aristotelianism, they explained the interpretation of sense data requiring the mind to be stamped or formed with ideas, and that people have shared conceptions that help them make sense of things (koine ennoia).[31] Nous for them is soul "somehow disposed" (pôs echon), the soul being somehow disposed pneuma, which is fire or air or a mixture. As in Plato, they treated nous as the ruling part of the soul.[32]

Plutarch criticized the Stoic idea of nous being corporeal, and agreed with Plato that the soul is more divine than the body while nous (mind) is more divine than the soul.[32] The mix of soul and body produces pleasure and pain; the conjunction of mind and soul produces reason which is the cause or the source of virtue and vice. (From: “On the Face in the Moon”)[33]

Albinus was one of the earliest authors to equate Aristotle's nous as prime mover of the Universe, with Plato's Form of the Good.[32]

Alexander of Aphrodisias edit

Alexander of Aphrodisias was a Peripatetic (Aristotelian) and his On the Soul (referred to as De anima in its traditional Latin title), explained that by his interpretation of Aristotle, potential intellect in man, that which has no nature but receives one from the active intellect, is material, and also called the "material intellect" (nous hulikos) and it is inseparable from the body, being "only a disposition" of it.[34] He argued strongly against the doctrine of immortality.[35] On the other hand, he identified the active intellect (nous poietikos), through whose agency the potential intellect in man becomes actual, not with anything from within people, but with the divine creator itself.[35] In the early Renaissance his doctrine of the soul's mortality was adopted by Pietro Pomponazzi against the Thomists and the Averroists.[35] For him, the only possible human immortality is an immortality of a detached human thought, more specifically when the nous has as the object of its thought the active intellect itself, or another incorporeal intelligible form.[36]

Alexander was also responsible for influencing the development of several more technical terms concerning the intellect, which became very influential amongst the great Islamic philosophers, Al-Farabi, Avicenna, and Averroes.

  • The intellect in habitu is a stage in which the human intellect has taken possession of a repertoire of thoughts, and so is potentially able to think those thoughts, but is not yet thinking these thoughts.
  • The intellect from outside, which became the "acquired intellect" in Islamic philosophy, describes the incorporeal active intellect which comes from outside man, and becomes an object of thought, making the material intellect actual and active. This term may have come from a particularly expressive translation of Alexander into Arabic. Plotinus also used such a term.[37] In any case, in Al-Farabi and Avicenna, the term took on a new meaning, distinguishing it from the active intellect in any simple sense - an ultimate stage of the human intellect where a kind of close relationship (a "conjunction") is made between a person's active intellect and the transcendental nous itself.

Themistius edit

Themistius, another influential commentator on this matter, understood Aristotle differently, stating that the passive or material intellect does "not employ a bodily organ for its activity, is wholly unmixed with the body, impassive, and separate [from matter]".[38] This means the human potential intellect, and not only the active intellect, is an incorporeal substance, or a disposition of incorporeal substance. For Themistius, the human soul becomes immortal "as soon as the active intellect intertwines with it at the outset of human thought".[36]

This understanding of the intellect was also very influential for Al-Farabi, Avicenna, and Averroes, and "virtually all Islamic and Jewish philosophers".[39] On the other hand, concerning the active intellect, like Alexander and Plotinus, he saw this as a transcendent being existing above and outside man. Differently from Alexander, he did not equate this being with the first cause of the Universe itself, but something lower.[40] However he equated it with Plato's Idea of the Good.[41]

Plotinus and Neoplatonism edit

Of the later Greek and Roman writers Plotinus, the initiator of neoplatonism, is particularly significant. Like Alexander of Aphrodisias and Themistius, he saw himself as a commentator explaining the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle. But in his Enneads he went further than those authors, often working from passages which had been presented more tentatively, possibly inspired partly by earlier authors such as the neopythagorean Numenius of Apamea. Neoplatonism provided a major inspiration to discussion concerning the intellect in late classical and medieval philosophy, theology and cosmology.

In neoplatonism there exists several levels or hypostases of being, including the natural and visible world as a lower part.

  • The Monad or "the One" sometimes also described as "the Good", based on the concept as it is found in Plato. This is the dunamis or possibility of existence. It causes the other levels by emanation.
  • The Nous (usually translated as "Intellect", or "Intelligence" in this context, or sometimes "mind" or "reason") is described as God, or more precisely an image of God, often referred to as the demiurge. It thinks its own contents, which are thoughts, equated to the Platonic ideas or forms (eide). The thinking of this Intellect is the highest activity of life. The actualization (energeia) of this thinking is the being of the forms. This Intellect is the first principle or foundation of existence. The One is prior to it, but not in the sense that a normal cause is prior to an effect, but instead Intellect is called an emanation of the One. The One is the possibility of this foundation of existence.
  • Soul (psychē). The soul is also an energeia: it acts upon or actualizes its own thoughts and creates "a separate, material cosmos that is the living image of the spiritual or noetic Cosmos contained as a unified thought within the Intelligence". So it is the soul which perceives things in nature physically, which it understands to be reality. Soul in Plotinus plays a role similar to the potential intellect in Aristotelian terminology.[32]
  • Lowest is matter.

This was based largely upon Plotinus' reading of Plato, but also incorporated many Aristotelian concepts, including the unmoved mover as energeia.[42] They also incorporated a theory of anamnesis, or knowledge coming from the past lives of our immortal souls, like that found in some of Plato's dialogues.

Later Platonists distinguished a hierarchy of three separate manifestations of nous, like Numenius of Apamea had.[43] Notable later neoplatonists include Porphyry and Proclus.

Medieval nous in religion edit

Greek philosophy had an influence on the major religions that defined the Middle Ages, and one aspect of this was the concept of nous.

Gnosticism edit

Gnosticism was a late classical movement that incorporated ideas inspired by Neoplatonism and Neopythagoreanism, but which was more a syncretic religious movement than an accepted philosophical movement.

Valentinus edit

In Valentinianism, Nous is the first male Aeon. Together with his conjugate female Aeon, Aletheia (truth), he emanates from the Propator Bythos (Προπάτωρ Βυθος "Forefather Depths") and his co-eternal Ennoia (Ἔννοια "Thought") or Sigē (Σιγή "Silence"); and these four form the primordial Tetrad. Like the other male Aeons he is sometimes regarded as androgynous, including in himself the female Aeon who is paired with him. He is the Only Begotten; and is styled the Father, the Beginning of All, inasmuch as from him are derived immediately or mediately the remaining Aeons who complete the Ogdoad (eight), thence the Decad (ten), and thence the Dodecad (twelve); in all, thirty Aeons constitute the Pleroma.

He alone is capable of knowing the Propator; but when he desired to impart like knowledge to the other Aeons, was withheld from so doing by Sigē. When Sophia ("Wisdom"), youngest Aeon of the thirty, was brought into peril by her yearning after this knowledge, Nous was foremost of the Aeons in interceding for her. From him, or through him from the Propator, Horos was sent to restore her. After her restoration, Nous, according to the providence of the Propator, produced another pair, Christ and the Holy Spirit, "in order to give fixity and steadfastness (εις πήξιν και στηριγμόν) to the Pleroma." For this Christ teaches the Aeons to be content to know that the Propator is in himself incomprehensible, and can be perceived only through the Only Begotten (Nous).[44][45]

Ophites edit

The Ophites held that the demiurge Ialdabaoth, after coming into conflict with the archons he created, created a son, Ophiomorphus, who is called the serpent-formed Nous.[46][47] This entity would become the serpent in the garden, who was compelled to act on behest of Sophia.[48]

Basilides edit

A similar conception of Nous appears in the later teaching of the Basilideans, according to which he is the first begotten of the Unbegotten Father, and himself the parent of Logos, from whom emanate successively Phronesis, Sophia, and Dunamis. But in this teaching, Nous is identified with Christ, is named Jesus, is sent to save those that believe, and returns to Him who sent him, after a Passion which is apparent only, Simon of Cyrene being substituted for him on the cross.[49] It is probable, however, that Nous had a place in the original system of Basilides himself; for his Ogdoad, "the great Archon of the universe, the ineffable"[50] is apparently made up of the five members named by Irenaeus (as above), together with two whom we find in Clement of Alexandria,[51] Dikaiosyne and Eirene, added to the originating Father.

Simon Magus edit

The antecedent of these systems is that of Simon,[52] of whose six "roots" emanating from the Unbegotten Fire, Nous is first. The correspondence of these "roots" with the first six Aeons that Valentinus derives from Bythos, is noted by Hippolytus.[53] Simon says in his Apophasis Megalē,[54]

There are two offshoots of the entire ages, having neither beginning nor end.... Of these the one appears from above, the great power, the Nous of the universe, administering all things, male; the other from beneath, the great Epinoia, female, bringing forth all things.

To Nous and Epinoia correspond Heaven and Earth, in the list given by Simon of the six material counterparts of his six emanations. The identity of this list with the six material objects alleged by Herodotus[55] to be worshipped by the Persians, together with the supreme place given by Simon to Fire as the primordial power, leads us to look to Iran for the origin of these systems in one aspect. In another, they connect themselves with the teaching of Pythagoras and of Plato.

Gospel of Mary edit

According to the Gospel of Mary, Jesus himself articulates the essence of Nous:

There where is the nous, lies the treasure." Then I said to him: "Lord, when someone meets you in a Moment of Vision, is it through the soul [psychē] that they see, or is it through the spirit [pneuma]?" The Teacher answered: "It is neither through the soul nor the spirit, but the nous between the two which sees the vision...

— The Gospel of Mary, p. 10

Mandaeism edit

In Mandaic, mana (ࡌࡀࡍࡀ) has been variously translated as "mind," "nous," or "treasure." The Mandaean formula "I am a mana of the Great Life" is a phrase often found in the numerous hymns of Book 2 of the Left Ginza.[56]

Medieval Islamic philosophy edit

During the Middle Ages, philosophy itself was in many places seen as opposed to the prevailing monotheistic religions, Islam, Christianity and Judaism. The strongest philosophical tradition for some centuries was amongst Islamic philosophers, who later came to strongly influence the late medieval philosophers of western Christendom, and the Jewish diaspora in the Mediterranean area. While there were earlier Muslim philosophers such as Al Kindi, chronologically the three most influential concerning the intellect were Al Farabi, Avicenna, and finally Averroes, a westerner who lived in Spain and was highly influential in the late Middle Ages amongst Jewish and Christian philosophers.

Al Farabi edit

The exact precedents of Al Farabi's influential philosophical scheme, in which nous (Arabic ʿaql) plays an important role, are no longer perfectly clear because of the great loss of texts in the Middle Ages which he would have had access to. He was apparently innovative in at least some points. He was clearly influenced by the same late classical world as neoplatonism, neopythagoreanism, but exactly how is less clear. Plotinus, Themistius and Alexander of Aphrodisias are generally accepted to have been influences. However while these three all placed the active intellect "at or near the top of the hierarchy of being", Al Farabi was clear in making it the lowest ranking in a series of distinct transcendental intelligences. He is the first known person to have done this in a clear way.[57] He was also the first philosopher known to have assumed the existence of a causal hierarchy of celestial spheres, and the incorporeal intelligences parallel to those spheres.[58] Al Farabi also fitted an explanation of prophecy into this scheme, in two levels. According to Davidson (p. 59):

The lower of the two levels, labeled specifically as "prophecy" (nubuwwa), is enjoyed by men who have not yet perfected their intellect, whereas the higher, which Alfarabi sometimes specifically names "revelation" (w-ḥ-y), comes exclusively to those who stand at the stage of acquired intellect.

This happens in the imagination (Arabic mutakhayyila; Greek phantasia), a faculty of the mind already described by Aristotle, which al Farabi described as serving the rational part of the soul (Arabic ʿaql; Greek nous). This faculty of imagination stores sense perceptions (maḥsūsāt), disassembles or recombines them, creates figurative or symbolic images (muḥākāt) of them which then appear in dreams, visualizes present and predicted events in a way different from conscious deliberation (rawiyya). This is under the influence, according to Al Farabi, of the active intellect. Theoretical truth can only be received by this faculty in a figurative or symbolic form, because the imagination is a physical capability and can not receive theoretical information in a proper abstract form. This rarely comes in a waking state, but more often in dreams. The lower type of prophecy is the best possible for the imaginative faculty, but the higher type of prophecy requires not only a receptive imagination, but also the condition of an "acquired intellect", where the human nous is in "conjunction" with the active intellect in the sense of God. Such a prophet is also a philosopher. When a philosopher-prophet has the necessary leadership qualities, he becomes philosopher-king.[59]

Avicenna edit

In terms of cosmology, according to Davidson (p. 82), "Avicenna's universe has a structure virtually identical with the structure of Alfarabi's" but there are differences in details. As in Al Farabi, there are several levels of intellect, intelligence or nous, each of the higher ones being associated with a celestial sphere. Avicenna however details three different types of effect which each of these higher intellects has, each "thinks" both the necessary existence and the possible being of the intelligence one level higher. And each "emanates" downwards the body and soul of its own celestial sphere, and also the intellect at the next lowest level. The active intellect, as in Alfarabi, is the last in the chain. Avicenna sees active intellect as the cause not only of intelligible thought and the forms in the "sublunar" world we people live, but also the matter. (In other words, three effects.)[60]

Concerning the workings of the human soul, Avicenna, like Al Farabi, sees the "material intellect" or potential intellect as something that is not material. He believed the soul was incorporeal, and the potential intellect was a disposition of it which was in the soul from birth. As in Al Farabi there are two further stages of potential for thinking, which are not yet actual thinking, first the mind acquires the most basic intelligible thoughts which we can not think in any other way, such as "the whole is greater than the part", then comes a second level of derivative intelligible thoughts which could be thought.[60] Concerning the actualization of thought, Avicenna applies the term "to two different things, to actual human thought, irrespective of the intellectual progress a man has made, and to actual thought when human intellectual development is complete", as in Al Farabi.[61]

When reasoning in the sense of deriving conclusions from syllogisms, Avicenna says people are using a physical "cogitative" faculty (mufakkira, fikra) of the soul, which can err. The human cogitative faculty is the same as the "compositive imaginative faculty (mutakhayyila) in reference to the animal soul".[62] But some people can use "insight" to avoid this step and derive conclusions directly by conjoining with the active intellect.[63]

Once a thought has been learned in a soul, the physical faculties of sense perception and imagination become unnecessary, and as a person acquires more thoughts, their soul becomes less connected to their body.[64] For Avicenna, different from the normal Aristotelian position, all of the soul is by nature immortal. But the level of intellectual development does affect the type of afterlife that the soul can have. Only a soul which has reached the highest type of conjunction with the active intellect can form a perfect conjunction with it after the death of the body, and this is a supreme eudaimonia. Lesser intellectual achievement means a less happy or even painful afterlife.[65]

Concerning prophecy, Avicenna identifies a broader range of possibilities which fit into this model, which is still similar to that of Al Farabi.[66]

Averroes edit

Averroes came to be regarded even in Europe as "the Commentator" to "the Philosopher", Aristotle, and his study of the questions surrounding the nous were very influential amongst Jewish and Christian philosophers, with some aspects being quite controversial. According to Herbert Davidson, Averroes' doctrine concerning nous can be divided into two periods. In the first, neoplatonic emanationism, not found in the original works of Aristotle, was combined with a naturalistic explanation of the human material intellect. "It also insists on the material intellect's having an active intellect as a direct object of thought and conjoining with the active intellect, notions never expressed in the Aristotelian canon." It was this presentation which Jewish philosophers such as Moses Narboni and Gersonides understood to be Averroes'. In the later model of the universe, which was transmitted to Christian philosophers, Averroes "dismisses emanationism and explains the generation of living beings in the sublunar world naturalistically, all in the name of a more genuine Aristotelianism. Yet it abandons the earlier naturalistic conception of the human material intellect and transforms the material intellect into something wholly un-Aristotelian, a single transcendent entity serving all mankind. It nominally salvages human conjunction with the active intellect, but in words that have little content."[67]

This position, that humankind shares one active intellect, was taken up by Parisian philosophers such as Siger of Brabant, but also widely rejected by philosophers such as Albertus Magnus, Thomas Aquinas, Ramon Lull, and Duns Scotus. Despite being widely considered heretical, the position was later defended by many more European philosophers including John of Jandun, who was the primary link bringing this doctrine from Paris to Bologna. After him this position continued to be defended and also rejected by various writers in northern Italy. In the 16th century it finally became a less common position after the renewal of an "Alexandrian" position based on that of Alexander of Aphrodisias, associated with Pietro Pomponazzi.[68]

Christianity edit

The Christian New Testament makes mention of the nous or noos, generally translated in modern English as "mind", but also showing a link to God's will or law:

  • Romans 7:23, refers to the law (nomos) of God which is the law in the writer's nous, as opposed to the law of sin which is in the body.
  • Romans 12:2, demands Christians should not conform to this world, but continuously be transformed by the renewing of their nous, so as to be able to determine what God’s will is.
  • 1 Corinthians 14:14-14:19. Discusses "speaking in tongues" and says that a person who speaks in tongues that they can not understand should prefer to also have understanding (nous), and it is better for the listeners also to be able to understand.
  • Ephesians 4:17-4:23. Discusses how non-Christians have a worthless nous, while Christians should seek to renew the spirit (pneuma) of their nous.
  • 2 Thessalonians 2:2. Uses the term to refer to being troubled of mind.
  • Revelation 17:9: "here is the nous which has wisdom".

In the writings of the Christian fathers a sound or pure nous is considered essential to the cultivation of wisdom.[69]

Philosophers influencing western Christianity edit

While philosophical works were not commonly read or taught in the early Middle Ages in most of Europe, the works of authors like Boethius and Augustine of Hippo formed an important exception. Both were influenced by neoplatonism, and were amongst the older works that were still known in the time of the Carolingian Renaissance, and the beginnings of Scholasticism.

In his early years Augustine was heavily influenced by Manichaeism and afterwards by the Neoplatonism of Plotinus.[70] After his conversion to Christianity and baptism (387), he developed his own approach to philosophy and theology, accommodating a variety of methods and different perspectives.[71]

Augustine used Neoplatonism selectively. He used both the neoplatonic Nous, and the Platonic Form of the Good (or "The Idea of the Good") as equivalent terms for the Christian God, or at least for one particular aspect of God. For example, God, nous, can act directly upon matter, and not only through souls, and concerning the souls through which it works upon the world experienced by humanity, some are treated as angels.[32]

Scholasticism becomes more clearly defined much later, as the peculiar native type of philosophy in medieval catholic Europe. In this period, Aristotle became "the Philosopher", and scholastic philosophers, like their Jewish and Muslim contemporaries, studied the concept of the intellectus on the basis not only of Aristotle, but also late classical interpreters like Augustine and Boethius. A European tradition of new and direct interpretations of Aristotle developed which was eventually strong enough to argue with partial success against some of the interpretations of Aristotle from the Islamic world, most notably Averroes' doctrine of their being one "active intellect" for all humanity. Notable "Catholic" (as opposed to Averroist) Aristotelians included Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas, the founder of Thomism, which exists to this day in various forms. Concerning the nous, Thomism agrees with those Aristotelians who insist that the intellect is immaterial and separate from any bodily organs, but as per Christian doctrine, the whole of the human soul is immortal, not only the intellect.

Eastern Orthodox edit

The human nous in Eastern Orthodox Christianity is the "eye of the heart or soul" or the "mind of the heart".[72][73][74][75] The soul of man, is created by God in His image, man's soul is intelligent and noetic. Saint Thalassius of Syria wrote that God created beings "with a capacity to receive the Spirit and to attain knowledge of Himself; He has brought into existence the senses and sensory perception to serve such beings". Eastern Orthodox Christians hold that God did this by creating mankind with intelligence and noetic faculties.[76]

Human reasoning is not enough: there will always remain an "irrational residue" which escapes analysis and which can not be expressed in concepts: it is this unknowable depth of things, that which constitutes their true, indefinable essence that also reflects the origin of things in God. In Eastern Christianity it is by faith or intuitive truth that this component of an object’s existence is grasped.[77] Though God through his energies draws us to him, his essence remains inaccessible.[77] The operation of faith being the means of free will by which mankind faces the future or unknown, these noetic operations contained in the concept of insight or noesis.[78] Faith (pistis) is therefore sometimes used interchangeably with noesis in Eastern Christianity.

Angels have intelligence and nous, whereas men have reason, both logos and dianoia, nous and sensory perception. This follows the idea that man is a microcosm and an expression of the whole creation or macrocosmos. The human nous was darkened after the Fall of Man (which was the result of the rebellion of reason against the nous),[79] but after the purification (healing or correction) of the nous (achieved through ascetic practices like hesychasm), the human nous (the "eye of the heart") will see God's uncreated Light (and feel God's uncreated love and beauty, at which point the nous will start the unceasing prayer of the heart) and become illuminated, allowing the person to become an orthodox theologian.[72][80][81]

In this belief, the soul is created in the image of God. Since God is Trinitarian, Mankind is Nous, reason, both logos and dianoia, and Spirit. The same is held true of the soul (or heart): it has nous, word and spirit. To understand this better first an understanding of Saint Gregory Palamas's teaching that man is a representation of the trinitarian mystery should be addressed. This holds that God is not meant in the sense that the Trinity should be understood anthropomorphically, but man is to be understood in a triune way. Or, that the Trinitarian God is not to be interpreted from the point of view of individual man, but man is interpreted on the basis of the Trinitarian God. And this interpretation is revelatory not merely psychological and human. This means that it is only when a person is within the revelation, as all the saints lived, that he can grasp this understanding completely (see theoria). The second presupposition is that mankind has and is composed of nous, word and spirit like the trinitarian mode of being. Man's nous, word and spirit are not hypostases or individual existences or realities, but activities or energies of the soul - whereas in the case with God or the Persons of the Holy Trinity, each are indeed hypostases. So these three components of each individual man are 'inseparable from one another' but they do not have a personal character" when in speaking of the being or ontology that is mankind. The nous as the eye of the soul, which some Fathers also call the heart, is the centre of man and is where true (spiritual) knowledge is validated. This is seen as true knowledge which is "implanted in the nous as always co-existing with it".[82]

Early modern philosophy edit

The so-called "early modern" philosophers of western Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries established arguments which led to the establishment of modern science as a methodical approach to improve the welfare of humanity by learning to control nature. As such, speculation about metaphysics, which cannot be used for anything practical, and which can never be confirmed against the reality we experience, started to be deliberately avoided, especially according to the so-called "empiricist" arguments of philosophers such as Bacon, Hobbes, Locke and Hume. The Latin motto "nihil in intellectu nisi prius fuerit in sensu" (nothing in the intellect without first being in the senses) has been described as the "guiding principle of empiricism" in the Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy.[83] (This was in fact an old Aristotelian doctrine, which they took up, but as discussed above Aristotelians still believed that the senses on their own were not enough to explain the mind.)

These philosophers explain the intellect as something developed from experience of sensations, being interpreted by the brain in a physical way, and nothing else, which means that absolute knowledge is impossible. For Bacon, Hobbes and Locke, who wrote in both English and Latin, "intellectus" was translated as "understanding".[84] Far from seeing it as secure way to perceive the truth about reality, Bacon, for example, actually named the intellectus in his Novum Organum, and the proœmium to his Great Instauration, as a major source of wrong conclusions, because it is biased in many ways, for example towards over-generalizing. For this reason, modern science should be methodical, in order not to be misled by the weak human intellect. He felt that lesser known Greek philosophers such as Democritus "who did not suppose a mind or reason in the frame of things", have been arrogantly dismissed because of Aristotelianism leading to a situation in his time wherein "the search of the physical causes hath been neglected, and passed in silence".[85] The intellect or understanding was the subject of Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding.[86]

These philosophers also tended not to emphasize the distinction between reason and intellect, describing the peculiar universal or abstract definitions of human understanding as being man-made and resulting from reason itself.[87] Hume even questioned the distinctness or peculiarity of human understanding and reason, compared to other types of associative or imaginative thinking found in some other animals.[88] In modern science during this time, Newton is sometimes described as more empiricist compared to Leibniz.

On the other hand, into modern times some philosophers have continued to propose that the human mind has an in-born ("a priori") ability to know the truth conclusively, and these philosophers have needed to argue that the human mind has direct and intuitive ideas about nature, and this means it can not be limited entirely to what can be known from sense perception. Amongst the early modern philosophers, some such as Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, and Kant, tend to be distinguished from the empiricists as rationalists, and to some extent at least some of them are called idealists, and their writings on the intellect or understanding present various doubts about empiricism, and in some cases they argued for positions which appear more similar to those of medieval and classical philosophers.

The first in this series of modern rationalists, Descartes, is credited with defining a "mind-body problem" which is a major subject of discussion for university philosophy courses. According to the presentation his 2nd Meditation, the human mind and body are different in kind, and while Descartes agrees with Hobbes for example that the human body works like a clockwork mechanism, and its workings include memory and imagination, the real human is the thinking being, a soul, which is not part of that mechanism. Descartes explicitly refused to divide this soul into its traditional parts such as intellect and reason, saying that these things were indivisible aspects of the soul. Descartes was therefore a dualist, but very much in opposition to traditional Aristotelian dualism. In his 6th Meditation he deliberately uses traditional terms and states that his active faculty of giving ideas to his thought must be corporeal, because the things perceived are clearly external to his own thinking and corporeal, while his passive faculty must be incorporeal (unless God is deliberately deceiving us, and then in this case the active faculty would be from God). This is the opposite of the traditional explanation found for example in Alexander of Aphrodisias and discussed above, for whom the passive intellect is material, while the active intellect is not. One result is that in many Aristotelian conceptions of the nous, for example that of Thomas Aquinas, the senses are still a source of all the intellect's conceptions. However, with the strict separation of mind and body proposed by Descartes, it becomes possible to propose that there can be thought about objects never perceived with the body's senses, such as a thousand sided geometrical figure. Gassendi objected to this distinction between the imagination and the intellect in Descartes.[89] Hobbes also objected, and according to his own philosophical approach asserted that the "triangle in the mind comes from the triangle we have seen" and "essence in so far as it is distinguished from existence is nothing else than a union of names by means of the verb is". Descartes, in his reply to this objection insisted that this traditional distinction between essence and existence is "known to all".[90]

His contemporary Blaise Pascal, criticised him in similar words to those used by Plato's Socrates concerning Anaxagoras, discussed above, saying that "I cannot forgive Descartes; in all his philosophy, Descartes did his best to dispense with God. But Descartes could not avoid prodding God to set the world in motion with a snap of his lordly fingers; after that, he had no more use for God."[91]

Descartes argued that when the intellect does a job of helping people interpret what they perceive, not with the help of an intellect which enters from outside, but because each human mind comes into being with innate God-given ideas, more similar then, to Plato's theory of anamnesis, only not requiring reincarnation. Apart from such examples as the geometrical definition of a triangle, another example is the idea of God, according to the 4th "Meditation", comes about because people make judgments about things which are not in the intellect or understanding. This is possible because the human will, being free, is not limited like the human intellect.

Spinoza, though considered a Cartesian and a rationalist, rejected Cartesian dualism and idealism. In his "pantheistic" approach, explained for example in his Ethics, God is the same as nature, the human intellect is just the same as the human will. The divine intellect of nature is quite different from human intellect, because it is finite, but Spinoza does accept that the human intellect is a part of the infinite divine intellect.

Leibniz, in comparison to the guiding principle of the empiricists described above, added some words nihil in intellectu nisi prius fuerit in sensu, nisi intellectus ipsi ("nothing in the intellect without first being in the senses" except the intellect itself).[83] Despite being at the forefront of modern science, and modernist philosophy, in his writings he still referred to the active and passive intellect, a divine intellect, and the immortality of the active intellect.

Berkeley, partly in reaction to Locke, also attempted to reintroduce an "immaterialism" into early modern philosophy (later referred to as "subjective idealism" by others). He argued that individuals can only know sensations and ideas of objects, not abstractions such as "matter", and that ideas depend on perceiving minds for their very existence. This belief later became immortalized in the dictum, esse est percipi ("to be is to be perceived"). As in classical and medieval philosophy, Berkeley believed understanding had to be explained by divine intervention, and that all our ideas are put in our mind by God.

Hume accepted some of Berkeley's corrections of Locke, but in answer insisted, as had Bacon and Hobbes, that absolute knowledge is not possible, and that all attempts to show how it could be possible have logical problems. Hume's writings remain highly influential on all philosophy afterwards, and are for example considered by Kant to have shaken him from an intellectual slumber.

Kant, a turning point in modern philosophy, agreed with some classical philosophers and Leibniz that the intellect itself, although it needed sensory experience for understanding to begin, needs something else in order to make sense of the incoming sense information. In his formulation the intellect (Verstand) has a priori or innate principles which it has before thinking even starts. Kant represents the starting point of German idealism and a new phase of modernity, while empiricist philosophy has also continued beyond Hume to the present day.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles (3 ed.), Oxford University Press, 1973, p. 1417
  2. ^ Several of the terms commonly used in English philosophical contexts come directly from classical languages. Nous itself comes from Ancient Greek νοῦς (nous) or νόος. "Intellect" comes from Latin intellēctus and intellegentia. To describe the activity of this faculty, the word intellection is sometimes used in philosophical contexts, as well as the Greek words noēsis and noeîn (νόησις, νοεῖν).
  3. ^ See entry for νόος 2021-03-08 at the Wayback Machine in Liddell & Scott, on the Perseus Project.
  4. ^ See entry for intellectus 2022-06-16 at the Wayback Machine in Lewis & Short, on the Perseus Project.
  5. ^ Rorty, Richard (1979), Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, Princeton University Press page 38.
  6. ^ "This quest for the beginnings proceeds through sense perception, reasoning, and what they call noesis, which is literally translated by "understanding" or intellect," and which we can perhaps translate a little bit more cautiously by "awareness," an awareness of the mind's eye as distinguished from sensible awareness." Strauss, Leo (1989), "Progress or Return", in Hilail Gilden (ed.), An Introduction to Political Philosophy: Ten Essays by Leo Strauss, Detroit: Wayne State UP.
  7. ^ This is from I.130 2021-04-16 at the Wayback Machine, the translation is by A.T. Murray, 1924.
  8. ^ Long, A.A. (1998), Nous, Routledge, from the original on 2011-05-14, retrieved 2011-03-26
  9. ^ Metaphysics I.4.984b 2020-08-06 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ Kirk; Raven; Schofield (1983), The Presocratic Philosophers (second ed.), Cambridge University Press Chapter X.
  11. ^ Kirk; Raven; Schofield (1983), The Presocratic Philosophers (second ed.), Cambridge University Press. See pages 204 and 235.
  12. ^ a b Kirk; Raven; Schofield (1983), The Presocratic Philosophers (second ed.), Cambridge University Press Chapter XII.
  13. ^ Anaxagoras, DK B 12 2007-04-16 at the Wayback Machine, trans. by J. Burnet
  14. ^ For example: McPherran, Mark (1996), The Religion of Socrates, The Pennsylvania State University Press, ISBN 0271040327, pp. 273-275; and Sedley, David (2007), Creationism and Its Critics in Antiquity, University of California Press, ISBN 9780520934368. It has been claimed that his report might be the earliest report of such an argument in Ahbel-Rappe, Sara (30 August 2009), Socrates: A Guide for the Perplexed, A&C Black, p. 27, ISBN 9780826433251
  15. ^ The translation quoted is from Amy Bonnette. Xenophon (1994), Memorabilia, Cornell University Press
  16. ^ On the Perseus Project: 28d 2020-08-06 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Kalkavage (2001), "Glossary", Plato's Timaeus, Focus Publishing. In ancient Greek the word was used for phrases such as "keep in mind" and "to my mind".
  18. ^ 28c 2020-09-03 at the Wayback Machine and 30d 2020-09-03 at the Wayback Machine. Translation by Fowler.
  19. ^ Fowler translation of the Phaedo as on the Perseus webpage: 97 2021-06-05 at the Wayback Machine-98 2021-06-22 at the Wayback Machine.
  20. ^ Philebus on the Perseus Project: 23b 2020-09-03 at the Wayback Machine-30e 2020-09-03 at the Wayback Machine. Translation is by Fowler.
  21. ^ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Aristotle's Ethics, Glossary of terms 2013-04-23 at the Wayback Machine.
  22. ^ De Anima Book III, chapter 3.
  23. ^ "Intelligence (nous) apprehend each definition (horos meaning "boundary"), which cannot be proved by reasoning". Nicomachean Ethics 1142a 2020-08-05 at the Wayback Machine, Rackham translation.
  24. ^ This is also discussed by him in the Posterior Analytics II.19.
  25. ^ Nicomachean Ethics VI.xi.1143a 2020-08-05 at the Wayback Machine-1143b 2020-08-05 at the Wayback Machine. Translation by Joe Sachs, p. 114, 2002 Focus publishing. The second last sentence is placed in different places by different modern editors and translators.
  26. ^ a b c Davidson, Herbert (1992), Alfarabi, Avicenna, and Averroes, on Intellect, Oxford University Press
  27. ^ De Anima, Bk. III, ch. 5, 430a10-25 translated by Joe Sachs, Aristotle's On the Soul and On Memory and Recollection, Green Lion Books
  28. ^ See Metaphysics 1072b.
  29. ^ "1075". from the original on 2021-06-17. Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  30. ^ Generation of Animals II.iii.736b.
  31. ^ Dyson, Henry (2009), Prolepsis and Ennoia in the Early Stoa, Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 9783110212297
  32. ^ a b c d e Menn, Stephen (1998), Descartes and Augustine, University of Cambridge Press
  33. ^ Lacus Curtius online text: On the Face in the Moon par. 28
  34. ^ De anima 84, cited in Davidson, page 9, who translated the quoted words.
  35. ^ a b c Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alexander of Aphrodisias" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 556.
  36. ^ a b Davidson p.43
  37. ^ Davidson page 12.
  38. ^ Translation and citation by Davidson again, from Themistius' paraphrase of Aristotle's De Anima.
  39. ^ Davidson page 13.
  40. ^ Davidson page 14.
  41. ^ Davidson p.18
  42. ^ See Moore, Edward, "Plotinus", Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, from the original on 2019-09-12, retrieved 2011-03-22 and Gerson, Lloyd (2018), "Plotinus", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, from the original on 2019-08-02, retrieved 2011-03-22. The direct quote above comes from Moore.
  43. ^ Encyclopedia of The Study in Philosophy (1969), Vol. 5, article on subject "Nous", article author: G.B. Kerferd
  44. ^ Irenaeus, On the Detection and Overthrow of the So-Called Gnosis, I. i. 1-5
  45. ^ Hippolytus of Rome, Refutation of All Heresies, vi. 29-31; Theodoret, Haer. Fab. i. 7.
  46. ^ Rasimus, Tuomas (2009). Paradise Reconsidered in Gnostic Mythmaking: Rethinking Sethianism in Light of the Ophite Evidence. BRILL. p. 108. ISBN 978-90-474-2670-7.
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  49. ^ Iren. I. xxiv. 4; Theod. H. E. i. 4.
  50. ^ Hipp. vi. 25.
  51. ^ Clement of Alexandria, Strom. iv. 25.
  52. ^ Hipp. vi. 12 ff.; Theod. I. i.
  53. ^ Hipp. vi. 20.
  54. ^ Ap. Hipp. vi. 18.
  55. ^ Herodotus, i.
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  57. ^ Davidson pp.12-14. One possible inspiration mentioned in a commentary of Aristotle's De Anima attributed to John Philoponus is a philosopher named Marinus, who was probably a student of Proclus. He in any case designated the active intellect to be angelic or daimonic, rather than the creator itself.
  58. ^ Davidson p.18 and p.45, which states "Within the translunar region, Aristotle recognized no causal relationship in what we may call the vertical plane; he did not recognize a causality that runs down through the series of incorporeal movers. And in the horizontal plane, that is, from each intelligence to the corresponding sphere, he recognized causality only in respect to motion, not in respect to existence."
  59. ^ Davidson pp.58-61.
  60. ^ a b Davidson ch. 4.
  61. ^ Davidson p.86
  62. ^ From Shifā': De Anima 45, translation by Davidson p.96.
  63. ^ Davidson pp.102
  64. ^ Davidson p.104
  65. ^ Davidson pp.111-115.
  66. ^ Davidson p.123.
  67. ^ Davidson p.356
  68. ^ Davidson ch.7
  69. ^ See, for example, the many references to nous and the necessity of its purification in the writings of the Philokalia
  70. ^ Cross, Frank L.; Livingstone, Elizabeth, eds. (2005). "Platonism". The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-280290-9.
  71. ^ TeSelle, Eugene (1970). Augustine the Theologian. London. pp. 347–349. ISBN 0-223-97728-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) March 2002 edition: ISBN 1-57910-918-7.
  72. ^ a b "Neptic Monasticism". from the original on 2017-12-30. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  73. ^ "What is the Human Nous?" 2017-07-09 at the Wayback Machine by John Romanides
  74. ^ "Before embarking on this study, the reader is asked to absorb a few Greek terms for which there is no English word that would not be imprecise or misleading. Chief among these is NOUS, which refers to the `eye of the heart' and is often translated as mind or intellect. Here we keep the Greek word NOUS throughout. The adjective related to it is NOETIC (noeros)." Orthodox Psychotherapy Section The Knowledge of God according to St. Gregory Palamas 2010-12-10 at the Wayback Machine by Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos published by Birth of Theotokos Monastery, Greece (January 1, 2005) ISBN 978-960-7070-27-2
  75. ^ The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church, SVS Press, 1997. (ISBN 0-913836-31-1) James Clarke & Co Ltd, 1991. (ISBN 0-227-67919-9) pgs 200-201
  76. ^ G.E.H; Sherrard, Philip; Ware, Kallistos (Timothy). The Philokalia, Vol. 4 Pg432 Nous the highest facility in man, through which - provided it is purified - he knows God or the inner essences or principles (q.v.) of created things by means of direct apprehension or spiritual perception. Unlike the dianoia or reason (q.v.), from which it must be carefully distinguished, the intellect does not function by formulating abstract concepts and then arguing on this basis to a conclusion reached through deductive reasoning, but it understands divine truth by means of immediate experience, intuition or 'simple cognition' (the term used by St Isaac the Syrian in his The Ascetical Homilies). The intellect dwells in the 'depths of the soul'; it constitutes the innermost aspect of the heart (St Diadochos, 79, 88: in our translation, vol. i, pp.. 280, 287). The intellect is the organ of contemplation (q.v.), the 'eye of the heart' (Makarian Homilies).
  77. ^ a b The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church, by Vladimir Lossky SVS Press, 1997, pg 33 (ISBN 0-913836-31-1). James Clarke & Co Ltd, 1991, pg 71 (ISBN 0-227-67919-9).
  78. ^ Anthropological turn in Christian theology: an Orthodox perspective 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine by Sergey S. Horujy
  79. ^ "The Illness and cure of the soul" 2011-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos
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  82. ^ Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos (2005), Orthodox Psychotherapy 2009-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, Tr. Esther E. Cunningham Williams (Birth of Theotokos Monastery, Greece), ISBN 978-960-7070-27-2
  83. ^ a b nihil in intellectu nisi prius in sensu, from the original on 2018-05-05, retrieved 2013-06-08
  84. ^ Martinich, Aloysius (1995), A Hobbes Dictionary, Blackwell, p. 305
  85. ^ Bacon Advancement of Learning II.VII.7
  86. ^ Nidditch, Peter, "Foreword", An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, Oxford University Press, p. xxii
  87. ^ Hobbes, Thomas, "II. Of Imagination", The English Works of Thomas Hobbes, vol. 3 (Leviathan), from the original on 2011-03-10, retrieved 2011-03-05 and also see De Homine X.
  88. ^ Hume, David, "I.III.VII (footnote) Of the Nature of the Idea Or Belief", A Treatise of Human Nature, from the original on 2009-02-10, retrieved 2011-03-05
  89. ^ The Philosophical Works of Descartes Vol. II, 1968, translated by Haldane and Ross, p.190
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  91. ^ Think Exist on Blaise Pascal 2017-11-12 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 12 Feb. 2009.

Further reading edit

Etymology and history of the term edit

  • Stella, F. "La notion d'Intelligence (Noûs-Noeîn) dans la Grèce antique. D'Homère au Platonisme" [archive], sur journals.openedition.org, 17 février 2016 (DOI 10.4000/methodos.4615).
  • Stella, F. "L'origine des termes νόος-νοεῖν" [archive], sur journals.openedition.org, 22 février 2016 (DOI 10.4000/methodos.4558).
  • Stella, F. Noos e noein da Omero a Platone, PUFC, 2021.

Aristotle's theory of nous edit

  • Alexander of Aphrodisias . Supplement to On the Soul. Trans. by R.W. Sharples. London: Duckworth, 2004.
  • Burnyeat, M. "Is an Aristotelian Philosophy of Mind Still Credible? (A Draft)." In Essays on Aristotle’s de Anima. Ed. C. MarthaNussbaum and Amelie OksenbergRorty . Clarendon Press, 1992. 15–26.
  • Burnyeat, M. "De Anima II 5." Phronesis 47.1 (2002)
  • Burnyeat, M. 2008. Aristotle's Divine Intellect. Milwaukee : Marquette University Press.
  • Caston, V. "Aristotle's Two Intellects: A Modest Proposal". Phronesis 44 (1999).
  • Kosman, A. "What Does the Maker Mind Make?" In Essays on Aristotle's De Anima. Ed. Nussbaum and Rorty. Oxford University Press, 1992. 343–58.
  • Kislev, S. F. "A Self-Forming Vessel: Aristotle, Plasticity, and the Developing Nature of the Intellect", Journal of the British Society of Phenomenology 51.3, 259–274 (2020).
  • Lowe, M. F. "Aristotle on Kinds of Thinking". Phronesis 28.1 (1983).

External links edit

nous, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, νοῦς, sometimes, equated, intellect, intelligence, concept, from, classical, philosophy, faculty, human, mind, necessary, understanding, what, true, real, this, diagram, shows, medieval, understanding, spheres, cosmos,. For other uses see Nous disambiguation Nous or Greek noῦs UK n aʊ s 1 US n uː s sometimes equated to intellect or intelligence is a concept from classical philosophy for the faculty of the human mind necessary for understanding what is true or real 2 This diagram shows the medieval understanding of spheres of the cosmos derived from Aristotle and as per the standard explanation by Ptolemy It came to be understood that at least the outermost sphere marked Primũ Mobile has its own intellect intelligence or nous a cosmic equivalent to the human mind Alternative English terms used in philosophy include understanding and mind or sometimes thought or reason in the sense of that which reasons not the activity of reasoning 3 4 It is also often described as something equivalent to perception except that it works within the mind the mind s eye 5 It has been suggested that the basic meaning is something like awareness 6 In colloquial British English nous also denotes good sense 1 which is close to one everyday meaning it had in Ancient Greece The nous performed a role comparable to the modern concept of intuition In Aristotle s influential works which are the main source of later philosophical meanings nous was carefully distinguished from sense perception imagination and reason although these terms are closely inter related The term was apparently already singled out by earlier philosophers such as Parmenides whose works are largely lost In post Aristotelian discussions the exact boundaries between perception understanding of perception and reasoning have not always agreed with the definitions of Aristotle even though his terminology remains influential In the Aristotelian scheme nous is the basic understanding or awareness that allows human beings to think rationally For Aristotle this was distinct from the processing of sensory perception including the use of imagination and memory which other animals can do For him then discussion of nous is connected to discussion of how the human mind sets definitions in a consistent and communicable way and whether people must be born with some innate potential to understand the same universal categories in the same logical ways Derived from this it was also sometimes argued in classical and medieval philosophy that the individual nous must require help of a spiritual and divine type By this type of account it also came to be argued that the human understanding nous somehow stems from this cosmic nous which is however not just a recipient of order but a creator of it Such explanations were influential in the development of medieval accounts of God the immortality of the soul and even the motions of the stars in Europe North Africa and the Middle East amongst both eclectic philosophers and authors representing all the major faiths of their times Contents 1 Pre Socratic usage 2 Socratic philosophy 2 1 Xenophon 2 2 Plato 2 3 Aristotle 2 4 Post Aristotelian classical theories 2 4 1 Alexander of Aphrodisias 2 4 2 Themistius 3 Plotinus and Neoplatonism 4 Medieval nous in religion 4 1 Gnosticism 4 1 1 Valentinus 4 1 2 Ophites 4 1 3 Basilides 4 1 4 Simon Magus 4 1 5 Gospel of Mary 4 1 6 Mandaeism 4 2 Medieval Islamic philosophy 4 2 1 Al Farabi 4 2 2 Avicenna 4 2 3 Averroes 4 3 Christianity 4 3 1 Philosophers influencing western Christianity 4 3 2 Eastern Orthodox 5 Early modern philosophy 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Etymology and history of the term 8 2 Aristotle s theory of nous 9 External linksPre Socratic usage edit nbsp The earliest surviving text that uses the word nous is the Iliad Agamemnon says to Achilles Do not thus mighty though you are godlike Achilles seek to deceive me with your wit nous for you will not get by me nor persuade me 7 In early Greek uses Homer used nous to signify mental activities of both mortals and immortals for example what they really have on their mind as opposed to what they say aloud It was one of several words related to thought thinking and perceiving with the mind In pre Socratic philosophy it became increasingly distinguished as a source of knowledge and reasoning opposed to mere sense perception or thinking influenced by the body such as emotion For example Heraclitus complained that much learning does not teach nous 8 Among some Greek authors a faculty of intelligence known as a higher mind came to be considered as a property of the cosmos as a whole The work of Parmenides set the scene for Greek philosophy to come and the concept of nous was central to his radical proposals He claimed that reality as perceived by the senses alone is not a world of truth at all because sense perception is so unreliable and what is perceived is so uncertain and changeable Instead he argued for a dualism wherein nous and related words the verb for thinking which describes its mental perceiving activity noein and the unchanging and eternal objects of this perception noeta describe another form of perception which is not physical but intellectual only distinct from sense perception and the objects of sense perception nbsp AnaxagorasAnaxagoras born about 500 BC is the first person who is definitely known to have explained the concept of a nous mind which arranged all other things in the cosmos in their proper order started them in a rotating motion and continuing to control them to some extent having an especially strong connection with living things However Aristotle reports an earlier philosopher Hermotimus of Clazomenae who had taken a similar position 9 Amongst the pre Socratic philosophers before Anaxagoras other philosophers had proposed a similar ordering human like principle causing life and the rotation of the heavens For example Empedocles like Hesiod much earlier described cosmic order and living things as caused by a cosmic version of love 10 and Pythagoras and Heraclitus attributed the cosmos with reason logos 11 According to Anaxagoras the cosmos is made of infinitely divisible matter every bit of which can inherently become anything except Mind nous which is also matter but which can only be found separated from this general mixture or else mixed into living things or in other words in the Greek terminology of the time things with a soul psyche 12 Anaxagoras wrote All other things partake in a portion of everything while nous is infinite and self ruled and is mixed with nothing but is alone itself by itself For if it were not by itself but were mixed with anything else it would partake in all things if it were mixed with any for in everything there is a portion of everything as has been said by me in what goes before and the things mixed with it would hinder it so that it would have power over nothing in the same way that it has now being alone by itself For it is the thinnest of all things and the purest and it has all knowledge about everything and the greatest strength and nous has power over all things both greater and smaller that have soul psyche 13 Concerning cosmology Anaxagoras like some Greek philosophers already before him believed the cosmos was revolving and had formed into its visible order as a result of such revolving causing a separating and mixing of different types of chemical elements Nous in his system originally caused this revolving motion to start but it does not necessarily continue to play a role once the mechanical motion has started His description was in other words shockingly for the time corporeal or mechanical with the moon made of earth the sun and stars made of red hot metal beliefs Socrates was later accused of holding during his trial and nous itself being a physically fine type of matter which also gathered and concentrated with the development of the cosmos This nous mind is not incorporeal it is the thinnest of all things The distinction between nous and other things nevertheless causes his scheme to sometimes be described as a peculiar kind of dualism 12 Anaxagoras concept of nous was distinct from later platonic and neoplatonic cosmologies in many ways which were also influenced by Eleatic Pythagorean and other pre Socratic ideas as well as the Socratics themselves Socratic philosophy editXenophon edit Xenophon the less famous of the two students of Socrates whose written accounts of him have survived recorded that he taught his students a kind of teleological justification of piety and respect for divine order in nature This has been described as an intelligent design argument for the existence of God in which nature has its own nous 14 For example in his Memorabilia 1 4 8 he describes Socrates asking a friend sceptical of religion Are you then of the opinion that intelligence nous alone exists nowhere and that you by some good chance seized hold of it while as you think those surpassingly large and infinitely numerous things all the earth and water are in such orderly condition through some senselessness Later in the same discussion he compares the nous which directs each person s body to the good sense phronesis of the god which is in everything arranging things to its pleasure 1 4 17 15 Plato describes Socrates making the same argument in his Philebus 28d using the same words nous and phronesis 16 Plato edit See also Phaedo and Timaeus dialogue Plato used the word nous in many ways that were not unusual in the everyday Greek of the time and often simply meant good sense or awareness 17 On the other hand in some of his Platonic dialogues it is described by key characters in a higher sense which was apparently already common In his Philebus 28c he has Socrates say that all philosophers agree whereby they really exalt themselves that mind nous is king of heaven and earth Perhaps they are right and later states that the ensuing discussion confirms the utterances of those who declared of old that mind nous always rules the universe 18 In his Cratylus Plato gives the etymology of Athena s name the goddess of wisdom from Atheonoa Ἀ8eonoa meaning god s theos mind nous In his Phaedo Plato s teacher Socrates is made to say just before dying that his discovery of Anaxagoras concept of a cosmic nous as the cause of the order of things was an important turning point for him But he also expressed disagreement with Anaxagoras understanding of the implications of his own doctrine because of Anaxagoras materialist understanding of causation Socrates said that Anaxagoras would give voice and air and hearing and countless other things of the sort as causes for our talking with each other and should fail to mention the real causes which are that the Athenians decided that it was best to condemn me 19 On the other hand Socrates seems to suggest that he also failed to develop a fully satisfactory teleological and dualistic understanding of a mind of nature whose aims represent the Good which all parts of nature aim at Concerning the nous that is the source of understanding of individuals Plato is widely understood to have used ideas from Parmenides in addition to Anaxagoras Like Parmenides Plato argued that relying on sense perception can never lead to true knowledge only opinion Instead Plato s more philosophical characters argue that nous must somehow perceive truth directly in the ways gods and daimons perceive What our mind sees directly in order to really understand things must not be the constantly changing material things but unchanging entities that exist in a different way the so called forms or ideas However he knew that contemporary philosophers often argued as in modern science that nous and perception are just two aspects of one physical activity and that perception is the source of knowledge and understanding not the other way around Just exactly how Plato believed that the nous of people lets them come to understand things in any way that improves upon sense perception and the kind of thinking which animals have is a subject of long running discussion and debate On the one hand in the Republic Plato s Socrates in the Analogy of the sun and Allegory of the Cave describes people as being able to perceive more clearly because of something from outside themselves something like when the sun shines helping eyesight The source of this illumination for the intellect is referred to as the Form of the Good On the other hand in the Meno for example Plato s Socrates explains the theory of anamnesis whereby people are born with ideas already in their soul which they somehow remember from previous lives Both theories were to become highly influential As in Xenophon Plato s Socrates frequently describes the soul in a political way with ruling parts and parts that are by nature meant to be ruled Nous is associated with the rational logistikon part of the individual human soul which by nature should rule In his Republic in the so called analogy of the divided line it has a special function within this rational part Plato tended to treat nous as the only immortal part of the soul Concerning the cosmos in the Timaeus the title character also tells a likely story in which nous is responsible for the creative work of the demiurge or maker who brought rational order to our universe This craftsman imitated what he perceived in the world of eternal Forms In the Philebus Socrates argues that nous in individual humans must share in a cosmic nous in the same way that human bodies are made up of small parts of the elements found in the rest of the universe And this nous must be in the genos of being a cause of all particular things as particular things 20 Aristotle edit See also Dianoia and Active intellect Like Plato Aristotle saw the nous or intellect of an individual as somehow similar to sense perception but also distinct 21 Sense perception in action provides images to the nous via the sensus communis and imagination without which thought could not occur But other animals have sensus communis and imagination whereas none of them have nous 22 Aristotelians divide perception of forms into the animal like one which perceives species sensibilis or sensible forms and species intelligibilis that are perceived in a different way by the nous Like Plato Aristotle linked nous to logos reason as uniquely human but he also distinguished nous from logos thereby distinguishing the faculty for setting definitions from the faculty that uses them to reason with 23 In his Nicomachean Ethics Book VI Aristotle divides the soul psyche into two parts one which has reason and one which does not but then divides the part which has reason into the reasoning logistikos part itself which is lower and the higher knowing epistemonikos part which contemplates general principles archai Nous he states is the source of the first principles or sources archai of definitions and it develops naturally as people gain experience 24 This he explains after first comparing the four other truth revealing capacities of soul technical know how techne logically deduced knowledge episteme sometimes translated as scientific knowledge practical wisdom phronesis and lastly theoretical wisdom sophia which is defined by Aristotle as the combination of nous and episteme All of these others apart from nous are types of reason logos And intellect nous is directed at what is ultimate on both sides since it is intellect and not reason logos that is directed at both the first terms horoi and the ultimate particulars on the one side at the changeless first terms in demonstrations and on the other side in thinking about action at the other sort of premise the variable particular for these particulars are the sources archai from which one discerns that for the sake of which an action is since the universals are derived from the particulars Hence intellect is both a beginning and an end since the demonstrations that are derived from these particulars are also about these And of these one must have perception and this perception is intellect 25 Aristotle s philosophical works continue many of the same Socratic themes as his teacher Plato Amongst the new proposals he made was a way of explaining causality and nous is an important part of his explanation As mentioned above Plato criticized Anaxagoras materialism or understanding that the intellect of nature only set the cosmos in motion but is no longer seen as the cause of physical events Aristotle explained that the changes of things can be described in terms of four causes at the same time Two of these four causes are similar to the materialist understanding each thing has a material which causes it to be how it is and some other thing which set in motion or initiated some process of change But at the same time according to Aristotle each thing is also caused by the natural forms they are tending to become and the natural ends or aims which somehow exist in nature as causes even in cases where human plans and aims are not involved These latter two causes the formal and final encompass the continuous effect of the intelligent ordering principle of nature itself Aristotle s special description of causality is especially apparent in the natural development of living things It leads to a method whereby Aristotle analyses causation and motion in terms of the potentialities and actualities of all things whereby all matter possesses various possibilities or potentialities of form and end and these possibilities become more fully real as their potential forms become actual or active reality something they will do on their own by nature unless stopped because of other natural things happening For example a stone has in its nature the potentiality of falling to the earth and it will do so and actualize this natural tendency if nothing is in the way Aristotle analyzed thinking in the same way For him the possibility of understanding rests on the relationship between intellect and sense perception Aristotle s remarks on the concept of what came to be called the active intellect and passive intellect along with various other terms are amongst the most intensely studied sentences in the history of philosophy 26 The terms are derived from a single passage in Aristotle s De Anima Book III Following is the translation of one of those passages 27 with some key Greek words shown in square brackets since in nature one thing is the material hule for each kind genos this is what is in potency all the particular things of that kind but it is something else that is the causal and productive thing by which all of them are formed as is the case with an art in relation to its material it is necessary in the soul psyche too that these distinct aspects be present the one sort is intellect nous by becoming all things the other sort by forming all things in the way an active condition hexis like light too makes the colors that are in potency be at work as colors to phōs poiei ta dunamei onta chrōmata energeiai chrōmata This sort of intellect which is like light in the way it makes potential things work as what they are is separate as well as being without attributes and unmixed since it is by its thinghood a being at work energeia for what acts is always distinguished in stature above what is acted upon as a governing source is above the material it works on Knowledge episteme in its being at work is the same as the thing it knows and while knowledge in potency comes first in time in any one knower in the whole of things it does not take precedence even in time This does not mean that at one time it thinks but at another time it does not think but when separated it is just exactly what it is and this alone is deathless and everlasting though we have no memory because this sort of intellect is not acted upon while the sort that is acted upon is destructible and without this nothing thinks The passage tries to explain how the human intellect passes from its original state in which it does not think to a subsequent state in which it does according to his distinction between potentiality and actuality 26 Aristotle says that the passive intellect receives the intelligible forms of things but that the active intellect is required to make the potential knowledge into actual knowledge in the same way that light makes potential colours into actual colours As Davidson remarks Just what Aristotle meant by potential intellect and active intellect terms not even explicit in the De anima and at best implied and just how he understood the interaction between them remains moot Students of the history of philosophy continue to debate Aristotle s intent particularly the question whether he considered the active intellect to be an aspect of the human soul or an entity existing independently of man 26 The passage is often read together with Metaphysics Book XII ch 7 10 where Aristotle makes nous as an actuality a central subject within a discussion of the cause of being and the cosmos In that book Aristotle equates active nous when people think and their nous becomes what they think about with the unmoved mover of the universe and God For the actuality of thought nous is life and God is that actuality and the essential actuality of God is life most good and eternal 28 Alexander of Aphrodisias for example equated this active intellect which is God with the one explained in De Anima while Themistius thought they could not be simply equated See below Like Plato before him Aristotle believes Anaxagoras cosmic nous implies and requires the cosmos to have intentions or ends Anaxagoras makes the Good a principle as causing motion for Mind nous moves things but moves them for some end and therefore there must be some other Good unless it is as we say for on our view the art of medicine is in a sense health 29 In the philosophy of Aristotle the soul psyche of a body is what makes it alive and is its actualized form thus every living thing including plant life has a soul The mind or intellect nous can be described variously as a power faculty part or aspect of the human soul For Aristotle soul and nous are not the same He did not rule out the possibility that nous might survive without the rest of the soul as in Plato but he specifically says that this immortal nous does not include any memories or anything else specific to an individual s life In his Generation of Animals Aristotle specifically says that while other parts of the soul come from the parents physically the human nous must come from outside into the body because it is divine or godly and it has nothing in common with the energeia of the body 30 This was yet another passage which Alexander of Aphrodisias would link to those mentioned above from De Anima and the Metaphysics in order to understand Aristotle s intentions Post Aristotelian classical theories edit Until the early modern era much of the discussion which has survived today concerning nous or intellect in Europe Africa and the Middle East concerned how to correctly interpret Aristotle and Plato However at least during the classical period materialist philosophies more similar to modern science such as Epicureanism were still relatively common The Epicureans believed that the bodily senses themselves were not the cause of error but the interpretations can be The term prolepsis was used by Epicureans to describe the way the mind forms general concepts from sense perceptions To the Stoics more like Heraclitus than Anaxagoras order in the cosmos comes from an entity called logos the cosmic reason But as in Anaxagoras this cosmic reason like human reason but higher is connected to the reason of individual humans The Stoics however did not invoke incorporeal causation but attempted to explain physics and human thinking in terms of matter and forces As in Aristotelianism they explained the interpretation of sense data requiring the mind to be stamped or formed with ideas and that people have shared conceptions that help them make sense of things koine ennoia 31 Nous for them is soul somehow disposed pos echon the soul being somehow disposed pneuma which is fire or air or a mixture As in Plato they treated nous as the ruling part of the soul 32 Plutarch criticized the Stoic idea of nous being corporeal and agreed with Plato that the soul is more divine than the body while nous mind is more divine than the soul 32 The mix of soul and body produces pleasure and pain the conjunction of mind and soul produces reason which is the cause or the source of virtue and vice From On the Face in the Moon 33 Albinus was one of the earliest authors to equate Aristotle s nous as prime mover of the Universe with Plato s Form of the Good 32 Alexander of Aphrodisias edit Main article Alexander of Aphrodisias Alexander of Aphrodisias was a Peripatetic Aristotelian and his On the Soul referred to as De anima in its traditional Latin title explained that by his interpretation of Aristotle potential intellect in man that which has no nature but receives one from the active intellect is material and also called the material intellect nous hulikos and it is inseparable from the body being only a disposition of it 34 He argued strongly against the doctrine of immortality 35 On the other hand he identified the active intellect nous poietikos through whose agency the potential intellect in man becomes actual not with anything from within people but with the divine creator itself 35 In the early Renaissance his doctrine of the soul s mortality was adopted by Pietro Pomponazzi against the Thomists and the Averroists 35 For him the only possible human immortality is an immortality of a detached human thought more specifically when the nous has as the object of its thought the active intellect itself or another incorporeal intelligible form 36 Alexander was also responsible for influencing the development of several more technical terms concerning the intellect which became very influential amongst the great Islamic philosophers Al Farabi Avicenna and Averroes The intellect in habitu is a stage in which the human intellect has taken possession of a repertoire of thoughts and so is potentially able to think those thoughts but is not yet thinking these thoughts The intellect from outside which became the acquired intellect in Islamic philosophy describes the incorporeal active intellect which comes from outside man and becomes an object of thought making the material intellect actual and active This term may have come from a particularly expressive translation of Alexander into Arabic Plotinus also used such a term 37 In any case in Al Farabi and Avicenna the term took on a new meaning distinguishing it from the active intellect in any simple sense an ultimate stage of the human intellect where a kind of close relationship a conjunction is made between a person s active intellect and the transcendental nous itself Themistius edit Main article Themistius Themistius another influential commentator on this matter understood Aristotle differently stating that the passive or material intellect does not employ a bodily organ for its activity is wholly unmixed with the body impassive and separate from matter 38 This means the human potential intellect and not only the active intellect is an incorporeal substance or a disposition of incorporeal substance For Themistius the human soul becomes immortal as soon as the active intellect intertwines with it at the outset of human thought 36 This understanding of the intellect was also very influential for Al Farabi Avicenna and Averroes and virtually all Islamic and Jewish philosophers 39 On the other hand concerning the active intellect like Alexander and Plotinus he saw this as a transcendent being existing above and outside man Differently from Alexander he did not equate this being with the first cause of the Universe itself but something lower 40 However he equated it with Plato s Idea of the Good 41 Plotinus and Neoplatonism editMain articles Plotinus Neoplatonism Porphyry philosopher and Proclus Of the later Greek and Roman writers Plotinus the initiator of neoplatonism is particularly significant Like Alexander of Aphrodisias and Themistius he saw himself as a commentator explaining the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle But in his Enneads he went further than those authors often working from passages which had been presented more tentatively possibly inspired partly by earlier authors such as the neopythagorean Numenius of Apamea Neoplatonism provided a major inspiration to discussion concerning the intellect in late classical and medieval philosophy theology and cosmology In neoplatonism there exists several levels or hypostases of being including the natural and visible world as a lower part The Monad or the One sometimes also described as the Good based on the concept as it is found in Plato This is the dunamis or possibility of existence It causes the other levels by emanation The Nous usually translated as Intellect or Intelligence in this context or sometimes mind or reason is described as God or more precisely an image of God often referred to as the demiurge It thinks its own contents which are thoughts equated to the Platonic ideas or forms eide The thinking of this Intellect is the highest activity of life The actualization energeia of this thinking is the being of the forms This Intellect is the first principle or foundation of existence The One is prior to it but not in the sense that a normal cause is prior to an effect but instead Intellect is called an emanation of the One The One is the possibility of this foundation of existence Soul psyche The soul is also an energeia it acts upon or actualizes its own thoughts and creates a separate material cosmos that is the living image of the spiritual or noetic Cosmos contained as a unified thought within the Intelligence So it is the soul which perceives things in nature physically which it understands to be reality Soul in Plotinus plays a role similar to the potential intellect in Aristotelian terminology 32 Lowest is matter This was based largely upon Plotinus reading of Plato but also incorporated many Aristotelian concepts including the unmoved mover as energeia 42 They also incorporated a theory of anamnesis or knowledge coming from the past lives of our immortal souls like that found in some of Plato s dialogues Later Platonists distinguished a hierarchy of three separate manifestations of nous like Numenius of Apamea had 43 Notable later neoplatonists include Porphyry and Proclus Medieval nous in religion editGreek philosophy had an influence on the major religions that defined the Middle Ages and one aspect of this was the concept of nous Gnosticism edit Main articles Gnosticism and Neoplatonism and Gnosticism Gnosticism was a late classical movement that incorporated ideas inspired by Neoplatonism and Neopythagoreanism but which was more a syncretic religious movement than an accepted philosophical movement Valentinus edit Main article Valentinus Gnostic In Valentinianism Nous is the first male Aeon Together with his conjugate female Aeon Aletheia truth he emanates from the Propator Bythos Propatwr By8os Forefather Depths and his co eternal Ennoia Ἔnnoia Thought or Sige Sigh Silence and these four form the primordial Tetrad Like the other male Aeons he is sometimes regarded as androgynous including in himself the female Aeon who is paired with him He is the Only Begotten and is styled the Father the Beginning of All inasmuch as from him are derived immediately or mediately the remaining Aeons who complete the Ogdoad eight thence the Decad ten and thence the Dodecad twelve in all thirty Aeons constitute the Pleroma He alone is capable of knowing the Propator but when he desired to impart like knowledge to the other Aeons was withheld from so doing by Sige When Sophia Wisdom youngest Aeon of the thirty was brought into peril by her yearning after this knowledge Nous was foremost of the Aeons in interceding for her From him or through him from the Propator Horos was sent to restore her After her restoration Nous according to the providence of the Propator produced another pair Christ and the Holy Spirit in order to give fixity and steadfastness eis ph3in kai sthrigmon to the Pleroma For this Christ teaches the Aeons to be content to know that the Propator is in himself incomprehensible and can be perceived only through the Only Begotten Nous 44 45 Ophites edit Main article Ophites The Ophites held that the demiurge Ialdabaoth after coming into conflict with the archons he created created a son Ophiomorphus who is called the serpent formed Nous 46 47 This entity would become the serpent in the garden who was compelled to act on behest of Sophia 48 Basilides edit Main article Basilides A similar conception of Nous appears in the later teaching of the Basilideans according to which he is the first begotten of the Unbegotten Father and himself the parent of Logos from whom emanate successively Phronesis Sophia and Dunamis But in this teaching Nous is identified with Christ is named Jesus is sent to save those that believe and returns to Him who sent him after a Passion which is apparent only Simon of Cyrene being substituted for him on the cross 49 It is probable however that Nous had a place in the original system of Basilides himself for his Ogdoad the great Archon of the universe the ineffable 50 is apparently made up of the five members named by Irenaeus as above together with two whom we find in Clement of Alexandria 51 Dikaiosyne and Eirene added to the originating Father Simon Magus edit Main article Simon Magus The antecedent of these systems is that of Simon 52 of whose six roots emanating from the Unbegotten Fire Nous is first The correspondence of these roots with the first six Aeons that Valentinus derives from Bythos is noted by Hippolytus 53 Simon says in his Apophasis Megale 54 There are two offshoots of the entire ages having neither beginning nor end Of these the one appears from above the great power the Nous of the universe administering all things male the other from beneath the great Epinoia female bringing forth all things To Nous and Epinoia correspond Heaven and Earth in the list given by Simon of the six material counterparts of his six emanations The identity of this list with the six material objects alleged by Herodotus 55 to be worshipped by the Persians together with the supreme place given by Simon to Fire as the primordial power leads us to look to Iran for the origin of these systems in one aspect In another they connect themselves with the teaching of Pythagoras and of Plato Gospel of Mary edit Main article Gospel of Mary According to the Gospel of Mary Jesus himself articulates the essence of Nous There where is the nous lies the treasure Then I said to him Lord when someone meets you in a Moment of Vision is it through the soul psyche that they see or is it through the spirit pneuma The Teacher answered It is neither through the soul nor the spirit but the nous between the two which sees the vision The Gospel of Mary p 10 Mandaeism edit Main article Mandaean cosmology In Mandaic mana ࡌࡀࡍࡀ has been variously translated as mind nous or treasure The Mandaean formula I am a mana of the Great Life is a phrase often found in the numerous hymns of Book 2 of the Left Ginza 56 Medieval Islamic philosophy edit Main articles Islamic philosophy Jewish philosophy and Averroism During the Middle Ages philosophy itself was in many places seen as opposed to the prevailing monotheistic religions Islam Christianity and Judaism The strongest philosophical tradition for some centuries was amongst Islamic philosophers who later came to strongly influence the late medieval philosophers of western Christendom and the Jewish diaspora in the Mediterranean area While there were earlier Muslim philosophers such as Al Kindi chronologically the three most influential concerning the intellect were Al Farabi Avicenna and finally Averroes a westerner who lived in Spain and was highly influential in the late Middle Ages amongst Jewish and Christian philosophers Al Farabi edit Main article Al FarabiThe exact precedents of Al Farabi s influential philosophical scheme in which nous Arabic ʿaql plays an important role are no longer perfectly clear because of the great loss of texts in the Middle Ages which he would have had access to He was apparently innovative in at least some points He was clearly influenced by the same late classical world as neoplatonism neopythagoreanism but exactly how is less clear Plotinus Themistius and Alexander of Aphrodisias are generally accepted to have been influences However while these three all placed the active intellect at or near the top of the hierarchy of being Al Farabi was clear in making it the lowest ranking in a series of distinct transcendental intelligences He is the first known person to have done this in a clear way 57 He was also the first philosopher known to have assumed the existence of a causal hierarchy of celestial spheres and the incorporeal intelligences parallel to those spheres 58 Al Farabi also fitted an explanation of prophecy into this scheme in two levels According to Davidson p 59 The lower of the two levels labeled specifically as prophecy nubuwwa is enjoyed by men who have not yet perfected their intellect whereas the higher which Alfarabi sometimes specifically names revelation w ḥ y comes exclusively to those who stand at the stage of acquired intellect This happens in the imagination Arabic mutakhayyila Greek phantasia a faculty of the mind already described by Aristotle which al Farabi described as serving the rational part of the soul Arabic ʿaql Greek nous This faculty of imagination stores sense perceptions maḥsusat disassembles or recombines them creates figurative or symbolic images muḥakat of them which then appear in dreams visualizes present and predicted events in a way different from conscious deliberation rawiyya This is under the influence according to Al Farabi of the active intellect Theoretical truth can only be received by this faculty in a figurative or symbolic form because the imagination is a physical capability and can not receive theoretical information in a proper abstract form This rarely comes in a waking state but more often in dreams The lower type of prophecy is the best possible for the imaginative faculty but the higher type of prophecy requires not only a receptive imagination but also the condition of an acquired intellect where the human nous is in conjunction with the active intellect in the sense of God Such a prophet is also a philosopher When a philosopher prophet has the necessary leadership qualities he becomes philosopher king 59 Avicenna edit Main article Avicenna In terms of cosmology according to Davidson p 82 Avicenna s universe has a structure virtually identical with the structure of Alfarabi s but there are differences in details As in Al Farabi there are several levels of intellect intelligence or nous each of the higher ones being associated with a celestial sphere Avicenna however details three different types of effect which each of these higher intellects has each thinks both the necessary existence and the possible being of the intelligence one level higher And each emanates downwards the body and soul of its own celestial sphere and also the intellect at the next lowest level The active intellect as in Alfarabi is the last in the chain Avicenna sees active intellect as the cause not only of intelligible thought and the forms in the sublunar world we people live but also the matter In other words three effects 60 Concerning the workings of the human soul Avicenna like Al Farabi sees the material intellect or potential intellect as something that is not material He believed the soul was incorporeal and the potential intellect was a disposition of it which was in the soul from birth As in Al Farabi there are two further stages of potential for thinking which are not yet actual thinking first the mind acquires the most basic intelligible thoughts which we can not think in any other way such as the whole is greater than the part then comes a second level of derivative intelligible thoughts which could be thought 60 Concerning the actualization of thought Avicenna applies the term to two different things to actual human thought irrespective of the intellectual progress a man has made and to actual thought when human intellectual development is complete as in Al Farabi 61 When reasoning in the sense of deriving conclusions from syllogisms Avicenna says people are using a physical cogitative faculty mufakkira fikra of the soul which can err The human cogitative faculty is the same as the compositive imaginative faculty mutakhayyila in reference to the animal soul 62 But some people can use insight to avoid this step and derive conclusions directly by conjoining with the active intellect 63 Once a thought has been learned in a soul the physical faculties of sense perception and imagination become unnecessary and as a person acquires more thoughts their soul becomes less connected to their body 64 For Avicenna different from the normal Aristotelian position all of the soul is by nature immortal But the level of intellectual development does affect the type of afterlife that the soul can have Only a soul which has reached the highest type of conjunction with the active intellect can form a perfect conjunction with it after the death of the body and this is a supreme eudaimonia Lesser intellectual achievement means a less happy or even painful afterlife 65 Concerning prophecy Avicenna identifies a broader range of possibilities which fit into this model which is still similar to that of Al Farabi 66 Averroes edit Main articles Averroes Averroism and Averroes theory of the unity of the intellect Averroes came to be regarded even in Europe as the Commentator to the Philosopher Aristotle and his study of the questions surrounding the nous were very influential amongst Jewish and Christian philosophers with some aspects being quite controversial According to Herbert Davidson Averroes doctrine concerning nous can be divided into two periods In the first neoplatonic emanationism not found in the original works of Aristotle was combined with a naturalistic explanation of the human material intellect It also insists on the material intellect s having an active intellect as a direct object of thought and conjoining with the active intellect notions never expressed in the Aristotelian canon It was this presentation which Jewish philosophers such as Moses Narboni and Gersonides understood to be Averroes In the later model of the universe which was transmitted to Christian philosophers Averroes dismisses emanationism and explains the generation of living beings in the sublunar world naturalistically all in the name of a more genuine Aristotelianism Yet it abandons the earlier naturalistic conception of the human material intellect and transforms the material intellect into something wholly un Aristotelian a single transcendent entity serving all mankind It nominally salvages human conjunction with the active intellect but in words that have little content 67 This position that humankind shares one active intellect was taken up by Parisian philosophers such as Siger of Brabant but also widely rejected by philosophers such as Albertus Magnus Thomas Aquinas Ramon Lull and Duns Scotus Despite being widely considered heretical the position was later defended by many more European philosophers including John of Jandun who was the primary link bringing this doctrine from Paris to Bologna After him this position continued to be defended and also rejected by various writers in northern Italy In the 16th century it finally became a less common position after the renewal of an Alexandrian position based on that of Alexander of Aphrodisias associated with Pietro Pomponazzi 68 Christianity edit The Christian New Testament makes mention of the nous or noos generally translated in modern English as mind but also showing a link to God s will or law Romans 7 23 refers to the law nomos of God which is the law in the writer s nous as opposed to the law of sin which is in the body Romans 12 2 demands Christians should not conform to this world but continuously be transformed by the renewing of their nous so as to be able to determine what God s will is 1 Corinthians 14 14 14 19 Discusses speaking in tongues and says that a person who speaks in tongues that they can not understand should prefer to also have understanding nous and it is better for the listeners also to be able to understand Ephesians 4 17 4 23 Discusses how non Christians have a worthless nous while Christians should seek to renew the spirit pneuma of their nous 2 Thessalonians 2 2 Uses the term to refer to being troubled of mind Revelation 17 9 here is the nous which has wisdom In the writings of the Christian fathers a sound or pure nous is considered essential to the cultivation of wisdom 69 Philosophers influencing western Christianity edit While philosophical works were not commonly read or taught in the early Middle Ages in most of Europe the works of authors like Boethius and Augustine of Hippo formed an important exception Both were influenced by neoplatonism and were amongst the older works that were still known in the time of the Carolingian Renaissance and the beginnings of Scholasticism In his early years Augustine was heavily influenced by Manichaeism and afterwards by the Neoplatonism of Plotinus 70 After his conversion to Christianity and baptism 387 he developed his own approach to philosophy and theology accommodating a variety of methods and different perspectives 71 Augustine used Neoplatonism selectively He used both the neoplatonic Nous and the Platonic Form of the Good or The Idea of the Good as equivalent terms for the Christian God or at least for one particular aspect of God For example God nous can act directly upon matter and not only through souls and concerning the souls through which it works upon the world experienced by humanity some are treated as angels 32 Scholasticism becomes more clearly defined much later as the peculiar native type of philosophy in medieval catholic Europe In this period Aristotle became the Philosopher and scholastic philosophers like their Jewish and Muslim contemporaries studied the concept of the intellectus on the basis not only of Aristotle but also late classical interpreters like Augustine and Boethius A European tradition of new and direct interpretations of Aristotle developed which was eventually strong enough to argue with partial success against some of the interpretations of Aristotle from the Islamic world most notably Averroes doctrine of their being one active intellect for all humanity Notable Catholic as opposed to Averroist Aristotelians included Albertus Magnus and Thomas Aquinas the founder of Thomism which exists to this day in various forms Concerning the nous Thomism agrees with those Aristotelians who insist that the intellect is immaterial and separate from any bodily organs but as per Christian doctrine the whole of the human soul is immortal not only the intellect Eastern Orthodox edit The human nous in Eastern Orthodox Christianity is the eye of the heart or soul or the mind of the heart 72 73 74 75 The soul of man is created by God in His image man s soul is intelligent and noetic Saint Thalassius of Syria wrote that God created beings with a capacity to receive the Spirit and to attain knowledge of Himself He has brought into existence the senses and sensory perception to serve such beings Eastern Orthodox Christians hold that God did this by creating mankind with intelligence and noetic faculties 76 Human reasoning is not enough there will always remain an irrational residue which escapes analysis and which can not be expressed in concepts it is this unknowable depth of things that which constitutes their true indefinable essence that also reflects the origin of things in God In Eastern Christianity it is by faith or intuitive truth that this component of an object s existence is grasped 77 Though God through his energies draws us to him his essence remains inaccessible 77 The operation of faith being the means of free will by which mankind faces the future or unknown these noetic operations contained in the concept of insight or noesis 78 Faith pistis is therefore sometimes used interchangeably with noesis in Eastern Christianity Angels have intelligence and nous whereas men have reason both logos and dianoia nous and sensory perception This follows the idea that man is a microcosm and an expression of the whole creation or macrocosmos The human nous was darkened after the Fall of Man which was the result of the rebellion of reason against the nous 79 but after the purification healing or correction of the nous achieved through ascetic practices like hesychasm the human nous the eye of the heart will see God s uncreated Light and feel God s uncreated love and beauty at which point the nous will start the unceasing prayer of the heart and become illuminated allowing the person to become an orthodox theologian 72 80 81 In this belief the soul is created in the image of God Since God is Trinitarian Mankind is Nous reason both logos and dianoia and Spirit The same is held true of the soul or heart it has nous word and spirit To understand this better first an understanding of Saint Gregory Palamas s teaching that man is a representation of the trinitarian mystery should be addressed This holds that God is not meant in the sense that the Trinity should be understood anthropomorphically but man is to be understood in a triune way Or that the Trinitarian God is not to be interpreted from the point of view of individual man but man is interpreted on the basis of the Trinitarian God And this interpretation is revelatory not merely psychological and human This means that it is only when a person is within the revelation as all the saints lived that he can grasp this understanding completely see theoria The second presupposition is that mankind has and is composed of nous word and spirit like the trinitarian mode of being Man s nous word and spirit are not hypostases or individual existences or realities but activities or energies of the soul whereas in the case with God or the Persons of the Holy Trinity each are indeed hypostases So these three components of each individual man are inseparable from one another but they do not have a personal character when in speaking of the being or ontology that is mankind The nous as the eye of the soul which some Fathers also call the heart is the centre of man and is where true spiritual knowledge is validated This is seen as true knowledge which is implanted in the nous as always co existing with it 82 Early modern philosophy editThe so called early modern philosophers of western Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries established arguments which led to the establishment of modern science as a methodical approach to improve the welfare of humanity by learning to control nature As such speculation about metaphysics which cannot be used for anything practical and which can never be confirmed against the reality we experience started to be deliberately avoided especially according to the so called empiricist arguments of philosophers such as Bacon Hobbes Locke and Hume The Latin motto nihil in intellectu nisi prius fuerit in sensu nothing in the intellect without first being in the senses has been described as the guiding principle of empiricism in the Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy 83 This was in fact an old Aristotelian doctrine which they took up but as discussed above Aristotelians still believed that the senses on their own were not enough to explain the mind These philosophers explain the intellect as something developed from experience of sensations being interpreted by the brain in a physical way and nothing else which means that absolute knowledge is impossible For Bacon Hobbes and Locke who wrote in both English and Latin intellectus was translated as understanding 84 Far from seeing it as secure way to perceive the truth about reality Bacon for example actually named the intellectus in his Novum Organum and the proœmium to his Great Instauration as a major source of wrong conclusions because it is biased in many ways for example towards over generalizing For this reason modern science should be methodical in order not to be misled by the weak human intellect He felt that lesser known Greek philosophers such as Democritus who did not suppose a mind or reason in the frame of things have been arrogantly dismissed because of Aristotelianism leading to a situation in his time wherein the search of the physical causes hath been neglected and passed in silence 85 The intellect or understanding was the subject of Locke s Essay Concerning Human Understanding 86 These philosophers also tended not to emphasize the distinction between reason and intellect describing the peculiar universal or abstract definitions of human understanding as being man made and resulting from reason itself 87 Hume even questioned the distinctness or peculiarity of human understanding and reason compared to other types of associative or imaginative thinking found in some other animals 88 In modern science during this time Newton is sometimes described as more empiricist compared to Leibniz On the other hand into modern times some philosophers have continued to propose that the human mind has an in born a priori ability to know the truth conclusively and these philosophers have needed to argue that the human mind has direct and intuitive ideas about nature and this means it can not be limited entirely to what can be known from sense perception Amongst the early modern philosophers some such as Descartes Spinoza Leibniz and Kant tend to be distinguished from the empiricists as rationalists and to some extent at least some of them are called idealists and their writings on the intellect or understanding present various doubts about empiricism and in some cases they argued for positions which appear more similar to those of medieval and classical philosophers The first in this series of modern rationalists Descartes is credited with defining a mind body problem which is a major subject of discussion for university philosophy courses According to the presentation his 2nd Meditation the human mind and body are different in kind and while Descartes agrees with Hobbes for example that the human body works like a clockwork mechanism and its workings include memory and imagination the real human is the thinking being a soul which is not part of that mechanism Descartes explicitly refused to divide this soul into its traditional parts such as intellect and reason saying that these things were indivisible aspects of the soul Descartes was therefore a dualist but very much in opposition to traditional Aristotelian dualism In his 6th Meditation he deliberately uses traditional terms and states that his active faculty of giving ideas to his thought must be corporeal because the things perceived are clearly external to his own thinking and corporeal while his passive faculty must be incorporeal unless God is deliberately deceiving us and then in this case the active faculty would be from God This is the opposite of the traditional explanation found for example in Alexander of Aphrodisias and discussed above for whom the passive intellect is material while the active intellect is not One result is that in many Aristotelian conceptions of the nous for example that of Thomas Aquinas the senses are still a source of all the intellect s conceptions However with the strict separation of mind and body proposed by Descartes it becomes possible to propose that there can be thought about objects never perceived with the body s senses such as a thousand sided geometrical figure Gassendi objected to this distinction between the imagination and the intellect in Descartes 89 Hobbes also objected and according to his own philosophical approach asserted that the triangle in the mind comes from the triangle we have seen and essence in so far as it is distinguished from existence is nothing else than a union of names by means of the verb is Descartes in his reply to this objection insisted that this traditional distinction between essence and existence is known to all 90 His contemporary Blaise Pascal criticised him in similar words to those used by Plato s Socrates concerning Anaxagoras discussed above saying that I cannot forgive Descartes in all his philosophy Descartes did his best to dispense with God But Descartes could not avoid prodding God to set the world in motion with a snap of his lordly fingers after that he had no more use for God 91 Descartes argued that when the intellect does a job of helping people interpret what they perceive not with the help of an intellect which enters from outside but because each human mind comes into being with innate God given ideas more similar then to Plato s theory of anamnesis only not requiring reincarnation Apart from such examples as the geometrical definition of a triangle another example is the idea of God according to the 4th Meditation comes about because people make judgments about things which are not in the intellect or understanding This is possible because the human will being free is not limited like the human intellect Spinoza though considered a Cartesian and a rationalist rejected Cartesian dualism and idealism In his pantheistic approach explained for example in his Ethics God is the same as nature the human intellect is just the same as the human will The divine intellect of nature is quite different from human intellect because it is finite but Spinoza does accept that the human intellect is a part of the infinite divine intellect Leibniz in comparison to the guiding principle of the empiricists described above added some words nihil in intellectu nisi prius fuerit in sensu nisi intellectus ipsi nothing in the intellect without first being in the senses except the intellect itself 83 Despite being at the forefront of modern science and modernist philosophy in his writings he still referred to the active and passive intellect a divine intellect and the immortality of the active intellect Berkeley partly in reaction to Locke also attempted to reintroduce an immaterialism into early modern philosophy later referred to as subjective idealism by others He argued that individuals can only know sensations and ideas of objects not abstractions such as matter and that ideas depend on perceiving minds for their very existence This belief later became immortalized in the dictum esse est percipi to be is to be perceived As in classical and medieval philosophy Berkeley believed understanding had to be explained by divine intervention and that all our ideas are put in our mind by God Hume accepted some of Berkeley s corrections of Locke but in answer insisted as had Bacon and Hobbes that absolute knowledge is not possible and that all attempts to show how it could be possible have logical problems Hume s writings remain highly influential on all philosophy afterwards and are for example considered by Kant to have shaken him from an intellectual slumber Kant a turning point in modern philosophy agreed with some classical philosophers and Leibniz that the intellect itself although it needed sensory experience for understanding to begin needs something else in order to make sense of the incoming sense information In his formulation the intellect Verstand has a priori or innate principles which it has before thinking even starts Kant represents the starting point of German idealism and a new phase of modernity while empiricist philosophy has also continued beyond Hume to the present day See also editBuddhi Cognitive psychology Divided line Gestalt psychology Intelligibility philosophy Mana Mandaeism Noema Noesis Noetics Noogenic Noology Noopolitik Noosphere Nootropic Noumenon Panpsychism Perception Perceptual psychology Phenomenology Phronesis Saṃjna Technoetics Tripartite theology References edit a b The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles 3 ed Oxford University Press 1973 p 1417 Several of the terms commonly used in English philosophical contexts come directly from classical languages Nous itself comes from Ancient Greek noῦs nous or noos Intellect comes from Latin intellectus and intellegentia To describe the activity of this faculty the word intellection is sometimes used in philosophical contexts as well as the Greek words noesis and noein nohsis noeῖn See entry for noos Archived 2021 03 08 at the Wayback Machine in Liddell amp Scott on the Perseus Project See entry for intellectus Archived 2022 06 16 at the Wayback Machine in Lewis amp Short on the Perseus Project Rorty Richard 1979 Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature Princeton University Press page 38 This quest for the beginnings proceeds through sense perception reasoning and what they call noesis which is literally translated by understanding or intellect and which we can perhaps translate a little bit more cautiously by awareness an awareness of the mind s eye as distinguished from sensible awareness Strauss Leo 1989 Progress or Return in Hilail Gilden ed An Introduction to Political Philosophy Ten Essays by Leo Strauss Detroit Wayne State UP This is from I 130 Archived 2021 04 16 at the Wayback Machine the translation is by A T Murray 1924 Long A A 1998 Nous Routledge archived from the original on 2011 05 14 retrieved 2011 03 26 Metaphysics I 4 984b Archived 2020 08 06 at the Wayback Machine Kirk Raven Schofield 1983 The Presocratic Philosophers second ed Cambridge University Press Chapter X Kirk Raven Schofield 1983 The Presocratic Philosophers second ed Cambridge University Press See pages 204 and 235 a b Kirk Raven Schofield 1983 The Presocratic Philosophers second ed Cambridge University Press Chapter XII Anaxagoras DK B 12 Archived 2007 04 16 at the Wayback Machine trans by J Burnet For example McPherran Mark 1996 The Religion of Socrates The Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 0271040327 pp 273 275 and Sedley David 2007 Creationism and Its Critics in Antiquity University of California Press ISBN 9780520934368 It has been claimed that his report might be the earliest report of such an argument in Ahbel Rappe Sara 30 August 2009 Socrates A Guide for the Perplexed A amp C Black p 27 ISBN 9780826433251 The translation quoted is from Amy Bonnette Xenophon 1994 Memorabilia Cornell University Press On the Perseus Project 28d Archived 2020 08 06 at the Wayback Machine Kalkavage 2001 Glossary Plato s Timaeus Focus Publishing In ancient Greek the word was used for phrases such as keep in mind and to my mind 28c Archived 2020 09 03 at the Wayback Machine and 30d Archived 2020 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Translation by Fowler Fowler translation of the Phaedo as on the Perseus webpage 97 Archived 2021 06 05 at the Wayback Machine 98 Archived 2021 06 22 at the Wayback Machine Philebus on the Perseus Project 23b Archived 2020 09 03 at the Wayback Machine 30e Archived 2020 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Translation is by Fowler Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Aristotle s Ethics Glossary of terms Archived 2013 04 23 at the Wayback Machine De Anima Book III chapter 3 Intelligence nous apprehend each definition horos meaning boundary which cannot be proved by reasoning Nicomachean Ethics 1142a Archived 2020 08 05 at the Wayback Machine Rackham translation This is also discussed by him in the Posterior Analytics II 19 Nicomachean Ethics VI xi 1143a Archived 2020 08 05 at the Wayback Machine 1143b Archived 2020 08 05 at the Wayback Machine Translation by Joe Sachs p 114 2002 Focus publishing The second last sentence is placed in different places by different modern editors and translators a b c Davidson Herbert 1992 Alfarabi Avicenna and Averroes on Intellect Oxford University Press De Anima Bk III ch 5 430a10 25 translated by Joe Sachs Aristotle s On the Soul and On Memory and Recollection Green Lion Books See Metaphysics 1072b 1075 Archived from the original on 2021 06 17 Retrieved 2021 02 20 Generation of Animals II iii 736b Dyson Henry 2009 Prolepsis and Ennoia in the Early Stoa Walter de Gruyter ISBN 9783110212297 a b c d e Menn Stephen 1998 Descartes and Augustine University of Cambridge Press Lacus Curtius online text On the Face in the Moon par 28 De anima 84 cited in Davidson page 9 who translated the quoted words a b c Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Alexander of Aphrodisias Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 556 a b Davidson p 43 Davidson page 12 Translation and citation by Davidson again from Themistius paraphrase of Aristotle s De Anima Davidson page 13 Davidson page 14 Davidson p 18 See Moore Edward Plotinus Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy archived from the original on 2019 09 12 retrieved 2011 03 22 and Gerson Lloyd 2018 Plotinus Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University archived from the original on 2019 08 02 retrieved 2011 03 22 The direct quote above comes from Moore Encyclopedia of The Study in Philosophy 1969 Vol 5 article on subject Nous article author G B Kerferd Irenaeus On the Detection and Overthrow of the So Called Gnosis I i 1 5 Hippolytus of Rome Refutation of All Heresies vi 29 31 Theodoret Haer Fab i 7 Rasimus Tuomas 2009 Paradise Reconsidered in Gnostic Mythmaking Rethinking Sethianism in Light of the Ophite Evidence BRILL p 108 ISBN 978 90 474 2670 7 Legge F 2014 Forerunners and Rivals of Christianity Cambridge University Press pp 49 51 ISBN 978 1 107 45092 9 Holsinger Friesen Thomas 2009 Irenaeus and Genesis A Study of Competition in Early Christian Hermeneutics Penn State Press pp 69 71 ISBN 978 1 57506 630 1 Iren I xxiv 4 Theod H E i 4 Hipp vi 25 Clement of Alexandria Strom iv 25 Hipp vi 12 ff Theod I i Hipp vi 20 Ap Hipp vi 18 Herodotus i Aldihisi Sabah 2008 The story of creation in the Mandaean holy book in the Ginza Rba PhD University College London Archived from the original on 2022 04 07 Retrieved 2021 12 17 Davidson pp 12 14 One possible inspiration mentioned in a commentary of Aristotle s De Anima attributed to John Philoponus is a philosopher named Marinus who was probably a student of Proclus He in any case designated the active intellect to be angelic or daimonic rather than the creator itself Davidson p 18 and p 45 which states Within the translunar region Aristotle recognized no causal relationship in what we may call the vertical plane he did not recognize a causality that runs down through the series of incorporeal movers And in the horizontal plane that is from each intelligence to the corresponding sphere he recognized causality only in respect to motion not in respect to existence Davidson pp 58 61 a b Davidson ch 4 Davidson p 86 From Shifa De Anima 45 translation by Davidson p 96 Davidson pp 102 Davidson p 104 Davidson pp 111 115 Davidson p 123 Davidson p 356 Davidson ch 7 See for example the many references to nous and the necessity of its purification in the writings of the Philokalia Cross Frank L Livingstone Elizabeth eds 2005 Platonism The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church Oxford Oxfordshire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 280290 9 TeSelle Eugene 1970 Augustine the Theologian London pp 347 349 ISBN 0 223 97728 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link March 2002 edition ISBN 1 57910 918 7 a b Neptic Monasticism Archived from the original on 2017 12 30 Retrieved 2009 01 16 What is the Human Nous Archived 2017 07 09 at the Wayback Machine by John Romanides Before embarking on this study the reader is asked to absorb a few Greek terms for which there is no English word that would not be imprecise or misleading Chief among these is NOUS which refers to the eye of the heart and is often translated as mind or intellect Here we keep the Greek word NOUS throughout The adjective related to it is NOETIC noeros Orthodox Psychotherapy Section The Knowledge of God according to St Gregory Palamas Archived 2010 12 10 at the Wayback Machine by Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos published by Birth of Theotokos Monastery Greece January 1 2005 ISBN 978 960 7070 27 2 The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church SVS Press 1997 ISBN 0 913836 31 1 James Clarke amp Co Ltd 1991 ISBN 0 227 67919 9 pgs 200 201 G E H Sherrard Philip Ware Kallistos Timothy The Philokalia Vol 4 Pg432 Nous the highest facility in man through which provided it is purified he knows God or the inner essences or principles q v of created things by means of direct apprehension or spiritual perception Unlike the dianoia or reason q v from which it must be carefully distinguished the intellect does not function by formulating abstract concepts and then arguing on this basis to a conclusion reached through deductive reasoning but it understands divine truth by means of immediate experience intuition or simple cognition the term used by St Isaac the Syrian in his The Ascetical Homilies The intellect dwells in the depths of the soul it constitutes the innermost aspect of the heart St Diadochos 79 88 in our translation vol i pp 280 287 The intellect is the organ of contemplation q v the eye of the heart Makarian Homilies a b The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church by Vladimir Lossky SVS Press 1997 pg 33 ISBN 0 913836 31 1 James Clarke amp Co Ltd 1991 pg 71 ISBN 0 227 67919 9 Anthropological turn in Christian theology an Orthodox perspective Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine by Sergey S Horujy The Illness and cure of the soul Archived 2011 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos The Relationship between Prayer and Theology Archived 2007 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Jesus Christ The Life of the World John S Romanides Archived from the original on 2017 06 29 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos 2005 Orthodox Psychotherapy Archived 2009 01 06 at the Wayback Machine Tr Esther E Cunningham Williams Birth of Theotokos Monastery Greece ISBN 978 960 7070 27 2 a b nihil in intellectu nisi prius in sensu archived from the original on 2018 05 05 retrieved 2013 06 08 Martinich Aloysius 1995 A Hobbes Dictionary Blackwell p 305 Bacon Advancement of Learning II VII 7 Nidditch Peter Foreword An Essay Concerning Human Understanding Oxford University Press p xxii Hobbes Thomas II Of Imagination The English Works of Thomas Hobbes vol 3 Leviathan archived from the original on 2011 03 10 retrieved 2011 03 05 and also see De Homine X Hume David I III VII footnote Of the Nature of the Idea Or Belief A Treatise of Human Nature archived from the original on 2009 02 10 retrieved 2011 03 05 The Philosophical Works of Descartes Vol II 1968 translated by Haldane and Ross p 190 The Philosophical Works of Descartes Vol II 1968 translated by Haldane and Ross p 77 Think Exist on Blaise Pascal Archived 2017 11 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 12 Feb 2009 Further reading editEtymology and history of the term edit Stella F La notion d Intelligence Nous Noein dans la Grece antique D Homere au Platonisme archive sur journals openedition org 17 fevrier 2016 DOI 10 4000 methodos 4615 Stella F L origine des termes noos noeῖn archive sur journals openedition org 22 fevrier 2016 DOI 10 4000 methodos 4558 Stella F Noos e noein da Omero a Platone PUFC 2021 Aristotle s theory of nous edit Alexander of Aphrodisias Supplement to On the Soul Trans by R W Sharples London Duckworth 2004 Burnyeat M Is an Aristotelian Philosophy of Mind Still Credible A Draft In Essays on Aristotle s de Anima Ed C MarthaNussbaum and Amelie OksenbergRorty Clarendon Press 1992 15 26 Burnyeat M De Anima II 5 Phronesis 47 1 2002 Burnyeat M 2008 Aristotle s Divine Intellect Milwaukee Marquette University Press Caston V Aristotle s Two Intellects A Modest Proposal Phronesis 44 1999 Kosman A What Does the Maker Mind Make In Essays on Aristotle s De Anima Ed Nussbaum and Rorty Oxford University Press 1992 343 58 Kislev S F A Self Forming Vessel Aristotle Plasticity and the Developing Nature of the Intellect Journal of the British Society of Phenomenology 51 3 259 274 2020 Lowe M F Aristotle on Kinds of Thinking Phronesis 28 1 1983 External links edit nbsp Look up nous in Wiktionary the free dictionary Definition of nous on Perseus Project website Aristotle s Psychology from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy What is the Human Nous by John Romanides Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nous amp oldid 1189594822, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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