Aristotle’s notion of an agent intellect may have some affinity with Buddhism. *
Hmm, reminds me a little of a monograph a Muslim friend suggested to me.
“Alfarabi, Avicenna, and Averroes, on Intellect: Their Cosmologies, Theories of the Active Intellect, and Theories of Human Intellect” by Herbert Davidson.
I wonder if there is a Muslim commentator on CAF who wouldn’t mind shedding some light on his own particular tradition. I must confess a bit of ignorance given the fact that Muslim Philosophy’s relationship seems…less straightforward than Greek Philosophy’s relationship with the Catholic West.
Its made it rather difficult for me at least to identify any particular theory of the soul/mind/consciousness/however you wish to phrase it in their tradition.
Regarding the Buddhism issue - i must confess i have a cursory knowledge on the matter - mostly what i end up reading in conference papers.
Usually this is where i’d defer to other CAF members like Rossum (who is Buddhist), Cecilianus (an Orthodox physicist whose breadth of learning is quite admirable) or Matteo Ricci (Chinese Catholic who has a very strong command of his culture’s philosophical tradition and India’s).
Making a poor stab at this: There seems to be at least 3 Predominate Philosophical Schools within Buddhism (with attendant sub-schools, but lets avoid that issue lest i get lost).
An Abhidharmic teaching associated with Theravada Buddhism, and the Yogacara and Madhyamaka schools associated with the various branches of Mahayana Buddhism (of which Zen and Tibetan Buddhism partake of).
Now going out on a limb - aspects of the Active Intellect as described by Aristotle sounds somewhat like a Yogacara conception of the Mind, specifically their idea of the Aālayavijñāna - the “Storehouse Consciousness” where the karma of one’s deeds “ripens” you might say and generates the next stage of what they call a mindstream.
Whooboy… before i butcher this any further, perhaps its time for a definitive quote:
Question: What is the nature of the mindstream that reincarnates from lifetime to lifetime?
Dalai Lama: …If one understands the term “soul” as a continuum of individuality from moment to moment, from lifetime to lifetime, then one can say that Buddhism also accepts a concept of soul; there is a kind of continuum of consciousness. From that point of view, the debate on whether or not there is a soul becomes strictly semantic. However, in the Buddhist doctrine of selflessness, or “no soul” theory, the understanding is that there is no eternal, unchanging, abiding, permanent self called “soul.” That is what is being denied in Buddhism.
Buddhism does not deny the continuum of consciousness. Because of this, we find some Tibetan scholars, such as the Sakya master Rendawa, who accept that there is such a thing as self or soul, the “kangsak ki dak” (Tib. gang zag gi bdag). However, the same word, the “kangsak ki dak,” the self, or person, or personal self, or identity, is at the same time denied by many other scholars.
We find diverse opinions, even among Buddhist scholars, as to what exactly the nature of self is, what exactly that thing or entity is that continues from one moment to the next moment, from one lifetime to the next lifetime. Some try to locate it within the aggregates, the composite of body and mind. Some explain it in terms of a designation based on the body and mind composite, and so on… One of the divisions of [the “Mind-Only”] school maintains there is a special continuum of consciousness called alayavijnana which is the fundamental consciousness.
*Mind Only is another name for Yogacara.
Bear in mind the quote:
1.) Only reflects the Tibetan version of Buddhism - and specifically the Gelug school of which the Dalai Lama belongs to. I have no clue if that’s a commonly held view amongst the other 3 Schools of Tibetan Buddhism.
2.) Is attempting to translate some rather difficult concepts from a philosophy born in an Indian milieu to the West. As its been related to me - a lot of subtle nuances got lost in translation.
Putting the philosophy aside from a second however, the reason why we end up having to take some of their postulates seriously is the manner of their approach.
As I said before, much of what characterizes the discussions about the mind/body situation does fall within the realm of Philosophy for the time being. And it isn’t even a mere matter of “Atheists vs. Religious.”
For example:
David Chalmers:-
youtube.com/watch?v=NK1Yo6VbRoo&list=UUa7iYmvqxcU22E5Qi-iMzTg&index=21&feature=plpp_video
Daniel Dennett -
youtube.com/watch?v=IHyev5-l4Tk&list=UUa7iYmvqxcU22E5Qi-iMzTg&index=11&feature=plpp_video
Colin Mcginn -
youtube.com/watch?v=CLFtGb9RKPo&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PLE3EE5182B63BF508
John Searle -
youtube.com/watch?v=WFQ0Spu50Oc&list=UUa7iYmvqxcU22E5Qi-iMzTg&index=18&feature=plpp_video
Just to name a few. As you can see - although they generally fall into the same “ballpark” their understandings of the issue go off in very different directions.
All of this is possible simply because we haven’t accumulated enough data as of yet. Nor do we necessarily know what type of experiments to run.
What the Buddhists (or at least some fo them) bring to the table is not just a philosophy with attendant “goal post moving” - they’ve been putting up their best meditators before the fMRI and saying “Test us.”
I’d liken the situation to the old issue regarding the existence of Black Swans. A lot of European thinkers could construct a logically sound proof back in the 16th to 18th centuries about the “nonexistence” of Black Swans. And you could also make an argument in reverse.
But what really clinched the argument was when someone got on a boat, landed in Australia, and saw a Black Swan for the first time.
You could have been persuaded to such a creatures existence back in Europe, but it was only via empirical methods can we put this as “case closed.”
That’s why we have to take some of their statements seriously ~ they keep coming up with new data…which is very different from simply making an argument.