Thomas Aquinas and Hervaeus Natalis on Concepts and Intentional Objects
Abstract
Analysis of two key medieval reflections at the intersection of our mental representations and external reality Thought, in a sense, transforms the world. When we think of a particular thing - Charlie the dog, for example - we always think of it in a universal way: as a dog. Through this act of thinking, Charlie comes to exist in our mind and becomes the dog that is the object of our thought. Explaining how our act of thinking relates to and transforms the reality around us is often considered the hallmark of the modern age. Yet the Middle Ages offer illuminating examples of speculation on the human mind and how it functions. This book explores the views on mental acts, concepts and objects of the mind of two of the most eminent Dominican authors of the late Middle Ages: Thomas Aquinas and Hervaeus Natalis, one of his closest followers. By putting Aquinas and Hervaeus Natalis directly in conversation with each other Amerini proposes a new interpretative framework for understanding their philosophy of mind and traces the origins of modern accounts of the intentionality of the mind.
Keywords
Realism; Mental Representation; Intentionality; Philosophy of Mind; Concepts; Mental Objects; Form; Thomas Aquinas; Hervaeus Natalis; Philosophy; History 500-1500DOI
10.11116/9789461667137ISBN
9789461667137, 9789461667137, 9789461667120Publisher
Leuven University PressPublisher website
https://lup.be/Publication date and place
Leuven, 2026Imprint
Leuven University PressSeries
Ancient and Medieval Philosophy - Series 1,Classification
Medieval Western philosophy


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