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Humanities and Arts

The Status of Souls as Hupokeimena in Aristotle

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Christopher Hauser

Christopher Hauser


  Peer Reviewed

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© attribution CC-BY

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2024-10-26

Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/met.149

Abstract

Key Questions

What is Aristotle’s view on the soul’s role in perception and thought?

Aristotle sees the soul as a foundational form that enables bodily perception and thought but does not itself perform mental activities.

How does Aristotle's concept of hupokeimenon relate to the soul?

Aristotle considers the soul a hupokeimenon, or underlying principle, which supports life and mental functions but does not act independently as a conscious entity.

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ARTICLE USAGE


Article usage: Oct-2024 to Dec-2025
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 December 65 65
2025 November 183 183
2025 October 129 129
2025 September 91 91
2025 August 78 78
2025 July 84 84
2025 June 124 124
2025 May 143 143
2025 April 78 78
2025 March 65 65
2025 February 52 52
2025 January 94 94
2024 December 64 64
2024 November 66 66
2024 October 17 17
Total 1333 1333
Show by month Manuscript Video Summary
2025 December 65 65
2025 November 183 183
2025 October 129 129
2025 September 91 91
2025 August 78 78
2025 July 84 84
2025 June 124 124
2025 May 143 143
2025 April 78 78
2025 March 65 65
2025 February 52 52
2025 January 94 94
2024 December 64 64
2024 November 66 66
2024 October 17 17
Total 1333 1333
Related Subjects
History
Music
Language
Philosophy
Classics
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copyright icon

© attribution CC-BY

  • 0

rating
1333 Views

Added on

2024-10-26

Doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/met.149

Related Subjects
History
Music
Language
Philosophy
Classics
Art

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