He was once thought to be the author of two works, now attributed by many scholars to an anonymous pseudo-Augustine of the same period.
[1][2][3] Thomas Aquinas made the traditional attribution of the De spiritu et anima[4] to Alcher.
[5][6] It is now reckoned to be a compilation of c. 1170, taken from Alcuin, Anselm, Bernard of Clairvaux, Augustine of Hippo, Cassiodorus, Hugh of St Victor, Isaac of Stella, and Isidore of Seville;[7] also Boethius.
[8] It is a source for medieval views on self-control,[9] and the doctrine that the soul rules the body.
At one point in the Summa Theologica, Aquinas writes about De Spiritu et Anima, "that book is not of great authority.