•  174
    Intelligence and the Philosophy of Mind
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 80 151-168. 2006.
    Al-Fârâbî’s thought on intellect was known to the Latin West through the translation of his Letter on the Intellect, through the Long Commentary on the De Anima by Averroes and through some other works. Al-Fârâbî identified the active power of intellect in Aristotle’s De Anima 3.5 as the unique and separately existing Agent Intellect, but the role of the Agent Intellect in forming intelligibles in act in the human soul is by no means unequivocally clear. Further, the apprehension of intelligible…Read more
  •  32
    The Judeo-Christian-Islamic heritage: philosophical & theological perspectives (edited book)
    with Irfan A. Omar
    Marquette University Press. 2012.
    The Abrahamic faiths—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—have bequeathed to the world a rich religious and cultural heritage which has been enormously influential through the centuries up to the present. While this is easily evident in the modern practices of these monotheisms, it is also profoundly present in the development of their diverse intellectual traditions with theological and philosophical insights and analyses seeking to understand and explain the nature of the presence of the divine to…Read more
  •  29
    This valuable reference work synthesizes and elucidates traditional themes and issues in Islamic philosophy as well as prominent topics emerging from the last twenty years of scholarship. Written for a wide readership of students and scholars, The Routledge Companion to Islamic Philosophy is unique in including coverage of both perennial philosophical issues in an Islamic context and also distinct concerns that emerge from Islamic religious thought. This work constitutes a substantial affirmatio…Read more
  • The Routledge companion to Islamic philosophy (edited book)
    with López Farjeat and Luis Xavier
    Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. 2016.
    Recent publications focused on Arabic/Islamic philosophy have traditionally considered this under the history of ideas and Oriental or Islamic studies. There is a need for a comprehensive collection of essays that treats Islamic philosophy as philosophy, and not merely as a conduit of intellectual history for delivering ideas from the ancient Greeks to medieval Christians. With this aim, The Routledge Companion to Islamic Philosophy is conceived as a well-structured and wide-ranging thematic app…Read more
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    In his seminal 1935 study of the internal senses in medieval2 thought, Harry Austryn Wolfson presented a detailed account of the development of the "classification and terminology" of the Greek, Arabic, Hebrew and Latin traditions on sensory powers which he called, "post-sensationary faculties,"~ that is, powers which are posterior to the five external senses. In explaining the complex development of teachings on the internal senses from Aristotle's texts, Wolfson recounted the Aristotelian unde…Read more
  •  1
    Time and Cause Essays Presented to Richard Taylor /Edited by Peter van Inwagen. --. --
    with Peter Van Inwagen
    Reidel Pub. Co. Sold and Distributed in the U.S.A. And Canada by Kluwer Boston, Inc., C1980. 1980.
  •  25
    The Liber de causis: a preliminary list of extant mss
    Les Etudes Philosophiques 25 (n/a): 63. 1983.
  •  10
    Review of Richard Taylor: Freedom, Anarchy, and the Law (review)
    Ethics 86 (4): 355-363. 1976.
  •  26
    A Common Negotiation: The Abrahamic Traditions and Philosophy in the Middle Ages
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 86 1-14. 2012.
    Classical and Post-Classical Philosophy in the Greek tradition played powerful roles in the formation of philosophical, scientific and theological thought by thinkers in the religious and cultural milieux of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Yet the scriptures, theologies, and fundamental concerns of these Abrahamic religious traditions reciprocally enriched the development of religious thought and secular philosophy and science by prompting ethical, metaphysical, and epistemological questions t…Read more
  •  52
    The classical rationalist philosophical tradition in Arabic reached its culmination in the writings of the twelfth-century Andalusian Averroes whose translated commentaries on Aristotle conveyed to the Latin West a rationalist approach which significantly challenged and affected theological and philosophical thinking in that Christian context. That methodology is shown at work in his Fasl al-Maqāl or Book of the Distinction of Discourse and the Establishment of the Relation of Religious Law and …Read more
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