Avicenna's Agent Intellect as a Completing Cause

History of Philosophy Quarterly 41 (1):45-72 (2024)
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Abstract

Avicenna says that intellectual cognition involves the emanation of an intelligible form by the ‘agent intellect’ upon the human mind. This paper argues that in order to understand why he says this, we need to think of intellectual cognition as a special case of a much more general phenomenon. More specifically, Avicenna's introduction of an agent intellect will be shown to be a natural consequence of certain assumptions about the temporality, the completion, and the teleology of the causal processes by which things acquire forms.

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Boris Hennig
Ryerson University

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References found in this work

Avicenna's Emanated Abstraction.Stephen R. Ogden - 2020 - Philosophers' Imprint 20 (10).
Aitiai as middle terms.Boris Hennig - 2022 - Journal of Ancient Philosophy 16 (2):126-148.
Intelligence and the Philosophy of Mind.Jon McGinnis - 2006 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 80:169-183.

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