Exact(2)
The intelligible species in the potential intellect constitutes the thought.
The condition of having attained an assimilated intellect constitutes natural human happiness, realizing all the aspirations of the human condition and human culture.
Similar(58)
Occasionally, though, you have what Nietzsche considered "something very rare but a thing to take delight in: a man with a finely constituted intellect who has the character, the inclinations and also the experiences appropriate to such an intellect".
The distinction between the sphere of the intellect and that of the body constitutes a type of dualism that is reflected in Mulla Sadra's distinction between mental and extra-mental existence.
Here, "life" constitutes a rebellion against the intellect on behalf of the primacy of physical existence.
Alongside the intellect, heart, soul and spirit the secret constitutes the human communication center with the divine; it is God's throne in our being and is, sine qua non, the divine trace in the human body.
The freedom of the intellect from the service to the individual will constitutes a sort of acting 'out of character'.
The definition can therefore be read, either as stating that attributes are what the intellect perceives of substance as constituting its actual essence, or that attributes are what the intellect perceives only as if they are what constitute the essence but are not what in fact constitutes it or them.
Thus there is a continuum, a process of circulazione which begins in the mind of God and descends through the work of the intelligenze to draw Dante's nature into that praise of the donna gentile which constitutes the fulfillment of his own nature, the highest expression of which his desire and intellect are capable [2.5.15, 18; 2.6.5, Diomedi (1999)].
He could, however, point out that, whereas the human intellect recognizes that certain actions for instance, murder or theft are evil, it cannot by itself discover the best definition of what constitutes a particular transgression; nor can it, on its own, determine an appropriate punishment.
These two principal avenues stem from some important ambiguities in the definition of "attribute": "By attribute I understand what the intellect perceives of substance as constituting its essence" (1D4).[12] The first term that is ambiguous is "intellect," since it can refer either to the finite intellect or the infinite one (cf. diagram in Section 1).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com