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Title: Rethinking Self-Cognition in Henry of Ghent
Author(s): CHEN, Yanfu
Journal: Recherches de Théologie et Philosophie Médiévales
Volume: 92    Issue: 2   Date: 2025   
Pages: 281-314
DOI: 10.2143/RTPM.92.2.3295161

Abstract :
The question of whether the human mind cognizes itself through its essence or through intelligible species was a central concern among late 13th-century scholastics. This article traces Henry of Ghent’s distinctive responses to this problem. In Quodlibet I, qq. 12-13, Henry defends the view that the embodied intellect, in a state of potentiality, requires the actualization by intelligible species to cognize extramental things, while leaving unresolved the issue of how the embodied mind knows itself. In his later writings, however, Henry, drawing on Augustine, advances the Direct Intuition Model (DIM), according to which the mind directly cognizes its own existence and distinctness through its self-presence. Meanwhile, he also develops the Reflection Model (RM). This model posits that self-cognition occurs when the mind reflects on its prior acts, which requires the mediation of the universal phantasm. While both DIM and RM appear to be rival accounts, I argue that they are complementary aspects of Henry’s unified theory of self-cognition. By integrating dispositional self-knowing, intuitive self-thinking, and introspective self-reflection, Henry develops a highly original theory of self-cognition.

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