| dc.description.abstract | This article explores Albert the Great’s understanding of human cognition as a hierarchical,
semiotic structure, made of light. It examines his response to the question “What is good for
man?”, tracing his shift from a moral–theological to an anthropological and epistemological
perspective in dialogue with Aristotelian, Neoplatonic, and Arabic sources. Through close
textual analysis of his writings on the soul and intellect, the article reconstructs man’s
hierarchical constitution and highlights the central role of signs and of the imagery of light
and shadows in his understanding of cognition. It argues that, for Albert, each level of
apprehension functions as a semiotic link that dynamically leads the human intellect from
lower to higher degrees of comprehension, intentionally pointing toward the divine source
of all being, understood as light. Albert’s conception of signs, intentionality, and intellectual
illumination is shown to anticipate and go beyond later semiotic theories. Consequently,
the article proposes that he should be regarded as a “proto-semiotic” thinker whose original
anthropological synthesis, centered on epistemology and sign-theory, illuminates the
intrinsic role of signs in human perfection and clarifies how words and images can express
the cognitive relation between created and uncreated being. | es |