Nous: Intellect in Greek Philosophy — From Anaxagoras to Plotinus and the Medieval Reception

Few concepts traverse the history of Western philosophy with such persistence as nous (νοῦς). The Greek word designates, depending on context, mind, intellect, intelligence, or reason — but its philosophical reach exceeds any of these translations taken alone. From the moment Anaxagoras elevated it to a cosmic ordering principle, through Plato’s elaboration and Aristotle’s analysis of intellect in the De Anima, to the emanationist metaphysics of Plotinus and the intense medieval debates between Averroes and Thomas Aquinas, nous constitutes a guiding thread that links cosmology, psychology, and theology in a single conceptual arc. ...

8 May 2026 · 11 min · Resumidor de Filosofia

Averroes (Ibn Rushd)

Averroes (Ibn Rushd) Abu al-Walid Muhammad Ibn Rushd, Latinized as Averroes, was born in Córdoba in 1126, at the height of the Islamic civilization of Al-Andalus. A judge (qadi), physician, and philosopher in the service of the Almohad caliphs, he became known in medieval Europe simply as “the Commentator”: his meticulous commentaries on the work of Aristotle were, for centuries, the principal gateway to Aristotelian thought for Latins and Jews. He fell from favor at the end of his life, when his works were condemned, and died in Marrakesh in 1198. ...

1 January 2026 · 2 min · Resumidor de Filosofia
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