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    The intellect receives intelligible forms as the objects ... — Carmelics
    Home/Consciousness & Mind
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    Supports→The intellect is passive.

    The intellect receives intelligible forms as the objects upon which it performs intellection.

    Consciousness & Mind
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    Consciousness & Mind

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    Something is passive in one sense if it receives forms, regardless of whether it...

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    The primary object of intellection is a quiddity presented to the inte...84%The intellect must produce an immaterial and universal object (the int...83%The intellect must produce an immaterial object to represent forms und...83%The resulting intelligible species acts on the possible intellect, mov...83%

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    SEP: simon-faversham
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    According to Simon, the intellect is the faculty of the rational soul whereby it thinks. Simon, who follows the Aristotelian doctrine closely, holds this faculty to be immaterial, passive, and separate. It is separate because it does not need to use an organ in order to perform its operation of intellection. It is also passive, but not in the same sense matter is passive. In fact, there are two senses in which something is passive: it can receive forms with or without undergoing qualitative chan

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