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    The intellect and the will have different ends: the intel... — Carmelics
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    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→The practical intellect and the will are not separate powers, but one power with two separate acts

    The intellect and the will have different ends: the intellect aims at truth, the will aims at the good

    Consciousness & MindVirtue Ethics
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    Virtue EthicsConsciousness & Mind

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    Divine Attributes2 linked

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    According to the doctrine of the transcendentals, the true and the good differ o...If the ends of two powers do not differ extensionally, then the powers themselve...The practical intellect and the will are not separate powers, but one power with...

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    The practical intellect and the will are not separate powers82%The practical intellect and the will are not separate powers, but one ...82%The active intellect is the end toward which man's intellect tends in ...80%A putative virtue concerning the intellect does not thereby exclude th...80%

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    SEP: philip-chancellor
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    Although not as well known, Philip’s psychology also exhibits some innovative features and influenced later thinkers, in particular, Albert the Great. In the early thirteenth century, theorists accounted for human abilities by arguing that in order to do what they do, agents must possess certain capacities or powers. Thus for every ability, there must be a corresponding and separate power. Human beings have the ability to think; therefore, they must have a cognitive power, often called intellect

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