İbn Rüşd’ün Heyûlânî Aklın Faal Akıl ile İttisali ve Özdeşliği Görüşünün Aquinas’ın Eleştirileri Bağlamında Değerlendirilmesi

The Evaluation of Averroes’ Doctrine of Conjunction of Material Intellect with Agent Intellect and Their Identity in the Context of Thomas Aqui-nas’ Criticisim

This study aims to highlight that why and how much the views of Averroes and Thomas Aquinas, who formed their own doctrines of intellect on Aristotle's intellect doctrine, differentiate on the possibility of material intel-lect conjunction with agent intellect and their identity. Averroes partly adopted the view of Ancient Greek commentators -Alexander of Aphrodisias, Themis-tius- and Ibn Bajja's agent intellect thesis and he argues that the agent intellect is external, eternal and one, its conjuncts with each individual through intelligi-ble. Nevertheless, Aquinas argued that the agent intellect is united to the soul as its faculty and it numerically multiplied according to the number of individu-als. Aquinas, who agrees with Averroes for the abstraction and actualization of intelligible, has criticized Averroes' separate and one agent intellect doctrine from two points: The first one is that the agent intellect is not a separate, single and common intellect, and the second it if separate intellect conjunct with in-dividuals through intelligible it will not suffice to make each individual under-stand per se. Therefore, in order for the individual to be per se understand, the agent intellect should not be a discrete, transcendent, and a single intellect, but an actual aspect of faculty of the individual intellectual soul.

___

  • Aquinas, T. (1946a). Summa Theologica, I-III. (Trans. Fathers of English Domini-can Province). New York: Benziger Brothers, Inc.
  • Aquinas, T. (1946b). The Commentary of St. Thomas Aquinas on Aristotle’s Treatise on the Soul. (Trans. R. A. Kocourek). Minnesota: St. Paul, Minn. College of St. Thomas.
  • Aquinas, T. (1949a). On Spiritual Creatures (De Spiritualibus Creaturis). (Trans. M. C. Fitzpatrick & J. J. Wellmuth). Milwaukee: Marquette University Press.
  • Aquinas, T. (1949b). The Soul: A Translation of St. Thomas Aquinas’ De Anima (Dis-puted Questions on De Anima). John Patrick Rowan: B. Herder Book Co.
  • Aquinas, T. (1956). Summa Contra Gentiles, I-IV. (Trans. J. F. Anderson). London: University of Notre Dame Press.
  • Aquinas, T. (1968). On the Unity of the Intellect Against the Averroists (De Unitate Intellectus Contra Averroistas). (Trans. B. H. Zedler). Milwaukee: Marquette University Press.
  • Aquinas, T. (1999). Commentary on Aristotle’s De Anima. (Trans. R. Pasnau). New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Aquinas, T. (2009). Compendium of Theology. (Trans. R. J. Regan). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Aquinas, T. (2013). Commentary on Book II of the Sentences, Distinction 17, Question 2, Ariticle 1. (Trans. R. Taylor). Philosophical Psychology in Arabic Thought and the Aristotelianism of the 13th Century. (Eds. L. X. Lopez & F. and J. A. Tellkamp). Paris: J. Vrin, 279-96..
  • Aristotle (1907). De Anima. (Trans. R. D. Hicks). London: Cambridge University Press.
  • Arkan, A. (2015). İbn Rüşd Psikolojisi: Fizikten Metafiziğe İbn Rüşd’ün İnsan Tasavvuru. İstanbul: İz Yayıncılık.
  • Black, D. (1993). Consciousness and Self-Knowledge in Aquinas’s Critique of Averroes’s Psychology. Journal of the History of Philosophy, 31, 349-385.
  • Black, D. (1999). Conjunction and the Identity of Knower and Known in Aver-roes. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly, 73, 159–84.
  • Davidson, H. (1992). Alfarabi, Avicenna, and Averroes on Intellect: Their Cosmologies, Theories of the Active Intellect, and Theories of Human Intellect. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Dönmez, S. (2009). Aklın Birlikten Çokluğa Yolculuğu: 13. Yüzyıl Latin İbn Rüşdçülüğü Bağlamında Aklın ya da Akılların Birliği Problemi. Ankara: Birleşik Yayınevi.
  • Ivry, A. L. (1966). Averroes on Intellection and Conjunction. Journal of the Ameri-can Oriental Society, 86 (2), 76-85.
  • İbn Rüşd (1950). Telhisu Kitabi’n-Nefs. (Ed. A. F. el-Ehvani). Kahire: Mektebetu’n Nahdati’l Mısriyye.
  • İbn Rüşd (1967-73). Tefsîr Mâ Ba‘de’t-Tabîa: Grand Commentaire de la Métaphysique. (Ed. M. Bouyges). Beyrut: Dâru’l-Maşrık.
  • İbn Rüşd (1982). The Epistle on the Possibility of Conjunction with the Active Intellect by Ibn Rushd with the Commentary of Moses Narboni: A Critical Edition and Annota-ted Translation. (Trans. & ed. K. Bland). New York: Jewish Theological Se-minary of America.
  • İbn Rüşd (2002). Middle Commentary on Aristotle’s De Anima: A Critical Edition of the Arabic Text with English Translation, Notes, and Introduction. (Trans. & ed. A. L. Ivry). Utah: Brigham University Press.
  • İbn Rüşd. (2009). Averroes’s Long Commentary on the De Anima of Aristotle. (Trans. & ed. R. Taylor). New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Miller, F. (2012). Aristotle on the Separability of Mind. The Oxford Handbook of Aristotle. (Ed. C. Shields). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 306-39.
  • Sarıoğlu, H. (2012). İbn Rüşd Felsefesi. İstanbul: Klasik Yayınları.
  • Taylor, R. (2009). Intellect as Intrinsic Formal Cause in the Soul According to Aquinas and Averroes. The Afterlife of the Platonic Soul: Reflections ofPlatonic Psychology in the Monotheistic Religions. (Eds. M. Elkaisy-Friemuth & J. Dillon). Leiden: Brill.
  • Taylor, R. (2013). Aquinas and ‘The Arabs’: Aquinas’s First Critical Encounter with the Doctrines of Avicenna and Averroes on the Intellect, In 2 Sent. d.1, q.2, a.1. Philosophical Psychology in Arabic Thought and the Aristotelianism of the 13th Century. (Eds. L. X. Lopez & F. and J. A. Tellkamp). Paris: J. Vrin, 142-183.