Abstract
Albertus Magnus favours the Aristotelian defi nition of the soul as the fi rst actuality or perfection of a natural body having life potentially. But he interprets Aristotle's vocabulary in a way that it becomes compatible with the separability of the soul from the body. The term "perfectio" is understood as referring to the soul's activity only, not to its essence. The term "forma" is avoided as inadequate for defi ning the soul's essence. The soul is understood as a substance which exists independently of its actions and its body. The article shows that Albertus' terminological decisions continue a tradition reaching from the Greek commentators, and John Philoponos in particular, to Avicenna. Albertus' position on another important issue is also infl uenced by Arabic sources. His defense of the unity of the soul's vegetative, animal and rational parts rests on arguments from Avicenna and Averroes. It is shown that Averroes' position on the problem is not clearcut: he advocates the unity thesis, but also teaches the plurality of the generic and individual forms in man. This double stance is visible in the Latin reception of Averroes' works, and also in Albertus, who presents Averroes both as supporter and opponent of the plurality thesis.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Hasse, D. N. (2009). The early albertus magnus and his arabic sources on the theory of the soul. In Transformations of the Soul: Aristotelian Psychology 1250-1650 (pp. 10–30). Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/156853408X360902
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.