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    The quiddity in the sensory representation is not intelli... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The analogy between intellection and vision is incomplete

    The quiddity in the sensory representation is not intelligible in itself but must be made intelligible by the agent intellect

    Consciousness & MindPerception
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    PerceptionConsciousness & Mind

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    In vision, the visible object is visible in itself without requiring an external...The analogy between intellection and vision is incomplete

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    The agent intellect performs an act of abstraction on the quiddity in ...89%The agent intellect makes the quiddity in the sensory representation u...88%The quiddity in the sensory representation is material and particular84%Just as light enables the eye to see and the visible object to be seen...83%

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    SEP: simon-faversham
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    The agent intellect endows the quiddity with intelligibility: through its act of abstraction it makes universal and immaterial the material and particular quiddity in the sensory representation (In De an.: q.12 and q.16). Simon, however, wavers between different descriptions of the act of abstraction. On one hand, he describes it as similar to the act of illumination, so that just as light enables the eye to see and the visible object to be seen, so the agent intellect enables the possible intel

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