Alexandrists
The Alexandrists were a school of Renaissance philosophers who, in the great controversy on the subject
of personal immortality, adopted the explanation of the De
Anima given by Alexander of Aphrodisias.
According to the
orthodox Thomism[?] of the Roman Catholic Church, Aristotle
rightly regarded reason as a facility of the individual
soul.
Against this, the Averroists, led by Agostino Nito[?], introduced the modifying theory that universal
reason in a sense individualizes itself in each soul and
then absorbs the active reason into itself again. These two
theories respectively evolved the doctrine of individual and
universal immortality, or the absorption of the individual
into the eternal One.
The Alexandrists, led by Pietro
Pomponazzi, boldly assailed these beliefs and denied that
either was rightly attributed to Aristotle. They held that
Aristotle considered the soul as a material and therefore
a mortal entity which operates during life only under the
authority of universal reason. Hence the Alexandrists denied
the possibility of any form of immortality, holding that,
since the soul is organically connected with the body, the
dissolution of the latter involves the extinction of the former.
Lightly edited version of initial text from 1911 encyclopedia -- Please update as needed