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    Why do children see the world as if it were far away, according to Albert the Great"
    In Beata Wojciechowska, Sylwia Konarska-Zimnicka & Lucyna Kostuch (eds.), Medicina antiqua, mediaevalis et moderna. Historia – filozofia – religia, t. 3, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jana Kochanowskiego. 2023.
    In Physics 1. 1, 184b11–12, Aristotle says that "a child begins by calling all men father, and all women mother, but later on distinguishes each of them". Aristotle uses this observation to explain why, in physical sciences, one should begin with the more general to advance to the more particular. In explaining what Aristotle means with this assertion, Albert the Great (in Physics, I, 1, 6) develops his own version of Avicenna's notion of 'the vague individual', which is intended to explain why …Read more
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    The development of the concept of “concept,” in a Fregean sense, was a major philosophical achievement. In antiquity and the Middle Ages, the notion of concept had not been clearly defined, and rationality was delimited by the ability to access universal representations. Nowadays we associate rationality with the ability to manipulate concepts and we assume that animals are irrational because they have none and, therefore, we think, they cannot speak. However, for Aristotle and the Peripatetic p…Read more
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    According to Aristotle’s De anima, human senses can recognize individual things qua individuals. This implies that they can apprehend individual forms, i.e., substances. However, substance is not sensible in itself. Although incidental perception accounts for the connection between intellectual and sensible properties, the question remains how intellect-lacking animals can perceive individual things. Avicenna advances an inner-sense theory to explain how animals interact with individuals without…Read more