This text explores Aristotle’s concept of phantasia, or imagination, as a distinct cognitive faculty that mediates between perception and thought. Unlike perception, which is always tied to the immediate presence of sensory objects and is inherently true, phantasia allows for the voluntary creation of mental images that can be false or imagined. Imagination is closely linked to memory, desire, and motivation, playing a crucial role in anticipating pleasure and pain, thereby driving animal movement and human action. Aristotle’s analysis reveals imagination as an active and flexible faculty that bridges sensory experience and thought, highlighting its importance in embodied cognition.
Sâmara Araújo Costa (Tue,) studied this question.
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