Information about Physics (aristotle)
The first page of Aristotle's Physics in the 1837 Oxford edition by Immanuel Bekker
Physics (or "Physica", or "Physicae Auscultationes" meaning "lessons") is a key text in the philosophy of Aristotle. It inaugurates in the current Andronichean order, the long series of Aristotle's physical, cosmological and biological works, and is preliminary to them. This collection of treatises or lessons deals with theoretical, methodological, philosophical concerns, rather than physical theories or contents of particular investigations. It sets the bases for the scientist to study the world subject to change, and change, or movement, or motion (kinesis) is one of the chief topics of the work. The ancient Greek title of these treatises - τὰ φυσικά - meant "the [writings] on nature" or "natural philosophy".
Books
The Physics is composed of eight books.Book I
Book I discusses the scientist's approach to nature and the world of changing things: remarks on method, a discussion of how some ancestors viewed nature, and the basic elements of change: a property (privation), which is overcome by its opposite (form), both of them belonging to a subject (substrate) which is not altered in the change.Book II
Book II introduces the term "nature" (Gr. physis) as "the ability of setting itself in motion". Thus, those entities are natural which are capable of starting to move, e.g. growing, acquiring qualities, displacing themselves, and finally being born and dying. (Artificial entities are not born, nor can they grow or feed themselves). Here is also where Aristotle presents his theory of the four causes; the particular importance of the final cause, the purpose (telos), in nature, is stressed and contrasted with the way in which nature doesn't usually work, chance (and luck). Something happens by chance when all the stages, which would usually lead to it, coincidentally sum without being purposefully chosen, and produce a result similar to the teleologically caused one. This applies in human decisions as well as in nature.Books III and IV
Books III and IV are taking in interest and probably formed a textual whole, defining the preconditions of motion. Book III begins with a very controversial definition of change involving the metaphysical notions of potentiality and actuality: it is the passage from being something potentially and becoming it actually, and this is the structure every natural phenomenon can be reduced to. The rest of the book is a treatment of infinity, a property which no physical magnitude can have, and which (both by addition and by division) only exists "upon reflection".Book IV prosecutes discussing the preconditions of motion with treating place (topos), and the various ways a thing can "be in" another (bodies can occupy place without us having to accept the existence of void); and time (khronos), which is a constant attribute of movements and which, Aristotle thinks, doesn't exist on its own but is relative to the things. The relationship among time, motion and the human soul is not univocally settled down: time is defined as "the number of movement in respect of before and after", so it cannot exist without that; but it is also said that it is the soul, capable of measuring the movement, which makes there be time.
Books V and VI
Books V and VI deal with how motion works. Book V classifies four species of movement, depending on where are the opposites located: in the categories of quantity (e.g. a change in dimensions: from great to small), quality (as for colors: from pale to dark), place (local movements generally go from up downwards and vice versa), or, more controversially, substance. In fact, substances do not have opposites, so it is inappropriate to say that something properly becomes, from not-man, man: generation and corruption are not kinesis in the full sense.Book VI discusses how a changing thing can reach the opposite state, if it has to pass through the infinite intermediate stages. It investigates by rational and logical arguments the notions of continuity and division, establishing that change -and time, and place, consequently- are not divisible into indivisible parts; they are not mathematically discrete but continuous, infinitely divisible. This implies, on Aristotle's view, that there can be no first stage of change: there is no definite moment when the motion begins. This discussion, together with that of speed and the different behaviour of the four different species of motion, eventually helps Aristotle contrast Zeno on his claim that the existence of motion is absurd, by replying to his paradoxes.
Book VII
Book VII briefly deals with the relationship of the moved to his mover, which Aristotle describes in substantial divergence with Plato's theory of the soul as capable of setting itself in motion (Laws book X, Phaedrus, Phaedo): everything which moves, is moved by other. He then tries to commensurate the species of motion and their speeds, with the local change (locomotion, phorà ) as the most fundamental to which the others can be reduced.Book VII has also come to us in an alternative version, not included in the Bekker edition.
Book VIII
Book VIII (which occupies almost a fourth of the entire Physics, and probably constituted originally an independent course of lessons) discusses two main topics, though with a wide deployment of arguments: the time limits of the universe, and the existence of a Prime Mover — eternal, indivisible, without parts and without magnitude. Isn't the universe eternal, has it had a beginning, will it ever end? Aristotle's response, as a Greek, could hardly be affirmative, never having been told of a creatio ex nihilo (for the first appearance of this concept in philosophy, see St. Augustine); but he also has philosophical reasons for denying that motion didn't exist all along, on the grounds of the theory presented in the earlier books of the Physics. The eternity of motion is also confirmed by the existence of a substance which is different from all the others in lacking matter; being pure form, it is also in an eternal actuality, not being imperfect in any respect; hence needing not to move. This is demonstrated by describing the celestial bodies thus: the first things to be moved must undergo an infinite, single and continuous movement, that is, circular. This is not caused by any contact but (I integrate the view contained in the Metaphysics, bk. XII) by love and aspiration.Bibliography
Die Aristotelische Physik, W. Wieland, 1962, 2nd revised edition 1970.External links
- Physics, trans. by R. P. Hardie and R. K. Gaye
- Aristotle's definition of motion and the complex 20th century debate (since W. D. Ross). A good overview article by Joe Sachs
- Michael Rowan-Robinson argues that Aristotle was the first real physicist in the West.
Aristotle (Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης Aristotélēs) (384 BC – 322 BC) was a Greek philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great.
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Andronicus of Rhodes (c. 70 B.C.), was the eleventh scholarch of the Peripatetics. His chief work was the arrangement of the writings of Aristotle and Theophrastus with materials supplied to him by Tyrannion.
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Natural philosophy or the philosophy of nature, known in Latin as philosophia naturalis, is a term applied to the objective study of nature and the physical universe that was regnant before the development of modern science.
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A telos (from the Greek word for "end", "purpose", or "goal") is an end or purpose, in a fairly constrained sense used by philosophers such as Aristotle. It is the root of the term "teleology," roughly the study of purposiveness, or the study of objects with a view to their aims,
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This article or section may be confusing or unclear for some readers.
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Please [improve the article] or discuss this issue on the talk page. This article has been tagged since June 2007.
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Potentiality and Actuality is one of the central themes of Aristotle's philosophy and metaphysics. With these two notions, Aristotle intends to provide a structure for the comprehension of reality.
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On Generation and Corruption (ancient Greek: Περὶ γενεσεως και φθορας, Latin:
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Discrete mathematics, also called finite mathematics or Decision Maths, is the study of mathematical structures that are fundamentally discrete, in the sense of not supporting or requiring the notion of continuity.
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Zeno of Elea (IPA:zɛnoʊ, ɛlɛɑː, Greek: Ζήνων ὁ Ἐλεάτης) (ca. 490 BC? – ca.
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Zeno's paradoxes are a set of problems devised by Zeno of Elea to support Parmenides' doctrine that "all is one" and that, contrary to the evidence of our senses, the belief in plurality and change is mistaken, and in particular that motion is nothing but an illusion.
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PLATO was one of the first generalized Computer assisted instruction systems, originally built by the University of Illinois and later taken over by Control Data Corporation (CDC), who provided the machines it ran on.
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The Laws is Plato's last and longest dialogue. The question asked at the beginning is not "What is law?" as one would expect- that is the question of the Minos.
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The Phaedrus (Greek Φαίδρος), written by Plato, is a dialogue between Plato's main protagonist, Socrates, and Phaedrus, an interlocutor in several dialogues.
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Plato's Phaedo (IPA: /ˈfiːdoʊ/) is one of the great dialogues of his middle period, along with the Republic and the Symposium.
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Bekker numbers are the page numbers used in the Prussian Academy of Sciences edition of the complete works of Aristotle. They take their name from the editor of that edition, the classical philologist August Immanuel Bekker (1785-1871).
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The cosmological argument is a metaphysical argument for the existence of God, or a first mover of the cosmos. It is traditionally known as an "argument from universal causation," an "argument from first cause," and also as an "uncaused cause" argument.
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Aurelius Augustinus, Augustine of Hippo, or Saint Augustine (November 13, 354 – August 28, 430) was a philosopher and theologian, and was bishop of the North African city of Hippo Regius for the last third of his life.
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Aristotelian and Neo-Aristotelian views of God have been very influential in Western intellectual history.
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The Metaphysics
In his book on first philosophy, which most now call the Metaphysics, Aristotle discussed the meaning of "being as being"...... Click the link for more information.
(William) David Ross KBE (15 April 1877 – 5 May 1971) was a Scottish philosopher, known for work in ethics. His best known work is The Right and the Good (1930), and he is perhaps best known for developing a pluralist, deontological form of intuitionist ethics in
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