Aither is a double-blind peer review, Open Access online academic journal. It is indexed at ERIH+ and Scopus. It is published by the Faculty of Arts of the Palackż University in Olomouc in cooperation with the Philosophical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. It comes out twice a year. Every second issue is international and contains foreign-language articles (mainly in English, but also in German and French). The journal is registered under the number ISSN 1803-7860.

Aither 34/2025 (International issue no. 13):4-23 | DOI: 10.5507/aither.2026.002

The Unity of the Human Soul: A Dimensional Reading of DA II.3

Pavol Labuda
Palackż University Olomouc


This paper offers a new interpretation of the unity of the human soul’s parts in De Anima II.3, drawing on the mathematical notion of dimension. Dimensionality, understood as an intrinsic property that parameterises a system’s complexity by the number of its independent yet ordered parameters, provides a suitable framework for explaining the unity of the tripartite human soul. The nutritive, the perceptual, and the intellectual parts emerge as three definitionally distinct yet operationally ordered dimensions of a human being. Though anachronistic, this dimensional account is philosophically fruitful: it effectively unifies three structural features of the soul’s parts – serial order, potential containment, and teleological subordination – identified in recent scholarship (Johansen 2012, 2014; Corcilius 2015, 2023, 2025).

Received: November 18, 2025; Revised: January 7, 2026; Accepted: January 26, 2026; Published: December 31, 2025  Show citation

ACS AIP APA ASA Harvard Chicago Chicago Notes IEEE ISO690 MLA NLM Turabian Vancouver
Labuda, P. (2025). The Unity of the Human Soul: A Dimensional Reading of DA II.3. Aither17(34), 4-23. doi: 10.5507/aither.2026.002
Download citation

References

  1. Aristotle. 1956. Aristotelis: De anima. OCT. Edited by W. D. Ross. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  2. Barnes, Jonathan (ed). 1984. The complete works of Aristotle. 2 vols. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  3. Boyle, Matthew. 2016. "Additive theories of rationality: A critique." European Journal of Philosophy 24(3), 527-555. Go to original source...
  4. Caston, Victor. 2020. "Aristotle on the transmission of information: Receiving form without the matter." In Philosophical Problems in Sense Perception: Testing the Limits of Aristotelianism, edited by David Bennett & Juhana Toivanen, 15-55. Cham: Springer. Go to original source...
  5. Christofidou, Andrea. 2021. "Human rationality: Descartes and Aristotle." Philosophical Investigations 44(3), 217-236. Go to original source...
  6. Cohoe, Caleb. 2020. "Living without a Soul: Why God and the Heavenly Movers Fall Outside of Aristotle's Psychology." Phronesis 65(3), 281-323. https://doi.org/10.1163/15685284-12342116 Go to original source...
  7. Corcilius, Klaus & Gregoric, Pavel. 2010. "Separability vs. Difference: Parts and Capacities of the Soul in Aristotle." Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 39, 81-119.
  8. Corcilius, Klaus. 2015. "Faculties in Ancient Philosophy." In The Faculties: A History. Oxford Philosophical Concepts. (2015; online edn, Oxford Academic, 21 May 2015). Go to original source...
  9. Corcilius, Klaus. 2023. "Transformation and discontinuity." In Praxis - Handeln und Handelnde in antiker Philosophie, edited by F. Buddensiek and S. Odzuck, 107-137. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. Go to original source...
  10. Corcilius, Klaus. 2025. "The Soul Itself in Aristotle's Science of Living Things." In The Science of Life in Aristotle and the Early Peripatos, edited by David Lefebvre, 23-50. Go to original source...
  11. Eckmann, Jean-Pierre & Tlusty, Tsvi. 2021. "Dimensional reduction in complex living systems: Where, why, and how." BioEssays 43, e2100062. https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.202100062 Go to original source...
  12. Glock, Hans-Johann. 2019. "Aristotle on the anthropological difference and animal minds." In Aristotle's anthropology, edited by Geert Keil & Nora Kreft, 140-160. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Go to original source...
  13. Hockett, Charles Francis. 1987. Refurbishing Our Foundations: Elementary Linguistics from an Advanced Point of View. Amsterdam: North-Holland. Go to original source...
  14. Johansen, Thomas K. 2012. The Powers of Aristotle's Soul. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Go to original source...
  15. Johansen, Thomas K. 2014. "Parts in Aristotle's Definition of Soul: De Anima Books I and II." In Partitioning the Soul. Debates from Plato to Leibniz, edited by Klaus Corcilius and Dominik Perler, 39-61. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. Go to original source...
  16. Moreno, Alvaro & Mossio, Matteo. 2015. Biological Autonomy: A Philosophical and Theoretical Enquiry. Dordrecht: Springer. Go to original source...
  17. Pearson, Giles. 2012. Aristotle on Desire. New York: Cambridge University Press. Go to original source...
  18. Pfeiffer, Christian. 2018. Aristotle's Theory of Bodies. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Go to original source...
  19. Polansky, Ronald M. 2007. Aristotle's "De anima." A critical commentary. New York: Cambridge University Press. Go to original source...
  20. Shields, Christopher. 2016. Aristotle. De anima. Translation with an introduction and commentary. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  21. Whitrow, Gerald James. 1955. Why Physical Space Has Three Dimensions. The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 6(21), 13-31. Go to original source...

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0), which permits use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original publication is properly cited. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.