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The Priority of Locomotion in Aristotle’s Physics
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vious to the locomotion, and one of these changes that obviously may occur prior to this act of locomotion, as we have seen, is growth. In this sense growth—but also all the other changes the living being undergoes in this state of ‘rest’—is prior to this locomotion. Moreover, one could even go a step further and say that, at least in certain cases, without these changes locomotion could not occur. For, as Morison has pointed out in his discus- sion of the passage from Phys. VIII 2 and 6, Aristotle thinks for instance that these changes are necessary in a sense for a sleeping animal to wake up and start to change place:71 the animal, after having ingested some food, digests the food while sleeping and distributes the nourishment to the respective parts of the body. Growth may occur, one might add, but after the distribution the animal wakes up and performs locomotion.72 If this is the case, then one indeed might raise the objection that this example clearly shows that locomotion in living beings certainly does not have primacy. As I have already said before, this would be a serious problem for Aristotle’s priority claim, as it then would not hold with respect to all changes that have their cause in sublunary sources of change, since animals, as the only proper self-movers and hence as the only proper sources of chains of change, are central to those changes. Aristotle, therefore, clearly needs to provide an appropriate answer to this objection. However, this answer, as I have shown, is presented in his first argument. There it is made clear that any growth, diminution, and alteration, when they occur in living things, necessarily presupposes some preceding locomotion; but, as I said before, this does not need to be the locomotion of that which grows, and it suffices for Aristotle to show that none of these other changes can occur without some change in place in order to show that locomotion is primary among the three kinds of non-substantial change. That this is Aristotle’s motivation for presenting this specific argument, is of course not clear at first glance from the passage in which the argument is stated, when viewed in isolation. Aristotle does not explicitly formulate there what I take to be the possible objection against the priority claim that he is thinking of. But a reader who has the discussion of the third eternity- objection and the solution that I have just outlined in mind, and who is now confronted with the claim about locomotion’s general priority indeed might wonder how this claim fits with the fact that the self-caused locomo- tion of an animal is preceded by, and according to the discussion might in some cases even be caused by, these other changes that occur in animals as self-sustaining organisms; after all, the solution to the third eternity-objec- tion in Phys. VIII 6 is given only two Bekker pages before the presentation 71 See Morison (2004), 69–70. 72 For this example see Phys. VIII 6, 259b11–13. The reason for the restriction of the argument’s scope 65 ISBN Print: 9783525253069 — ISBN E-Book: 9783647253060 © 2014, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen
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The Priority of Locomotion in Aristotle’s Physics
Titel
The Priority of Locomotion in Aristotle’s Physics
Autor
Sebastian Odzuck
Herausgeber
Dorothea Frede
Gisela Striker
Verlag
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co
Datum
2014
Sprache
englisch
Lizenz
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
ISBN
9783647253060
Abmessungen
15.5 x 23.2 cm
Seiten
238
Kategorien
Geisteswissenschaften
Naturwissenschaften Physik

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  1. Acknowledgements 9
  2. 1. Introduction 10
  3. 2. The importance of the primary kind of change 14
    1. 2.1 Overview 14
    2. 2.2 The arrangement of the Physics 15
      1. 2.2.1 First option: Books VI–VIII as the treatise On Change 18
        1. 2.2.1.1 Andronicus 19
        2. 2.2.1.2 Theophrastus’ letter 19
        3. 2.2.1.3 References in Aristotle 21
        4. 2.2.1.4 Eudemus 21
      2. 2.2.2 Second option: Books V–VIII as the treatise On Change 22
    3. 2.3 The eight books of the Physics 25
      1. 2.3.1 Physics I–IV: Examining change for the sake of understanding nature 25
      2. 2.3.2 Physics V–VIII: The general analysis of change 27
    4. 2.4 Physics VIII 31
      1. 2.4.1 Overview 31
      2. 2.4.2 The argument of Physics VIII 31
      3. 2.4.3 The importance of the primary kind of change 34
    5. 2.5 Conclusion 40
  4. 3. Change in quality and quantity of living beings depends on loco-motion, but not vice versa 42
    1. 3.1 Overview 42
    2. 3.2 Growth and diminution presuppose alteration 44
      1. 3.2.1 Growth presupposes alteration 45
      2. 3.2.2 Diminution presupposes alteration 48
    3. 3.3 Alteration presupposes locomotion 49
    4. 3.4 Does locomotion precede all occurrences of change in quantity? 53
    5. 3.5 The reason for the restriction of the argument’s scope 58
    6. 3.6 The sense of priority 67
    7. 3.7 Conclusion 69
  5. 4. Locomotion necessarily accompanies each of the other kinds of change, but not vice versa 71
    1. 4.1 Overview 71
    2. 4.2 What changes in quantity changes with respect to place 73
      1. 4.2.1 Overview 73
      2. 4.2.2 What is growing moves to a larger place 74
      3. 4.2.3 Change in place implies no change in the spatial order of the subject’s parts 78
      4. 4.2.4 A possible objection 81
      5. 4.2.5 Compatibility with the irreducibility of the kinds of change 85
      6. 4.2.6 Conclusion 88
    3. 4.3 What undergoes generation or corruption changes with respect to place 89
      1. 4.3.1 Overview 89
      2. 4.3.2 Generation and corruption in virtue of aggregation and segregation 90
      3. 4.3.3 What aggregates or segregates must change with respect to place 96
      4. 4.3.4 Conclusion 97
    4. 4.4 What changes in quality changes with respect to place 98
      1. 4.4.1 Overview 98
      2. 4.4.2 What does it mean that condensation and rarefaction are principles of quality? 100
      3. 4.4.3 Every alteration involves a change in the four basic qualities 104
      4. 4.4.4 Every change in the four basic qualities involves con- densation or rarefaction 108
      5. 4.4.5 Condensation and rarefaction are forms of aggregation and segregation 110
      6. 4.4.6 What changes in quality changes with respect to place 112
      7. 4.4.7 Conclusion 113
    5. 4.5 Conclusion 113
  6. 5. All changes depend on the first locomotion, but not vice versa 115
    1. 5.1 Overview 115
    2. 5.2 The unity of the eternal change 118
      1. 5.2.1 Two ways in which change may be eternal 118
      2. 5.2.2 Why the eternal change must be one and continuous 121
      3. 5.2.3 The criteria for being one continuous change 123
      4. 5.2.4 What is better is the case in nature 127
    3. 5.3 Locomotion alone can be one and eternal 130
      1. 5.3.1 None of the other three kinds of change can be one and eternal 131
      2. 5.3.2 Only circular locomotion can be one and eternal 134
    4. 5.4 Locomotion has ontological priority 137
      1. 5.4.1 Ontological priority 137
      2. 5.4.2 A third sense in which locomotion is ontologically prior 139
    5. 5.5 Conclusion 142
  7. 6. Locomotion has temporal priority 144
    1. 6.1 Overview 144
    2. 6.2 Locomotion has priority in time, since it is the only change eternals can undergo 146
    3. 6.3 Objection: Locomotion is the last of all changes in perishable things 148
    4. 6.4 Coming to be presupposes an earlier locomotion 150
    5. 6.5 The locomotion of the sun as a cause of generation 154
    6. 6.6 Conclusion 162
  8. 7. Locomotion is prior in essence 164
    1. 7.1 Locomotion is prior in essence, since it is last in coming to be 164
      1. 7.1.1 Overview 164
      2. 7.1.2 The reversed priority claim 166
      3. 7.1.3 A different use of the term ‘locomotion’ 172
      4. 7.1.4 Does locomotion come to things last? 175
        1. 7.1.4.1 Capacities of the soul 176
        2. 7.1.4.2 Priority in essence of the locomotive capacity 179
      5. 7.1.5 Another sense of priority in essence 182
      6. 7.1.6 Conclusion 184
    2. 7.2 Locomotion alone preserves its subject’s essence 186
      1. 7.2.1 Overview 186
      2. 7.2.2 Locomotion does not change its subject’s being 188
      3. 7.2.3 Locomotion preserves its subject’s essence best 190
      4. 7.2.4 Making x depart from its essence by being part of a change in essence? 195
        1. 7.2.4.1 Alteration as part of a change in essence 195
        2. 7.2.4.2 Growth and diminution as part of change in essence 199
        3. 7.2.4.3 Locomotion as a part of a change in essence? 201
      5. 7.2.5 Change in quality or quantity in principle may result in a change in essence 202
    3. 7.3 Conclusion: Locomotion’s priority in essence 207
  9. 8. Conclusion 211
  10. Bibliography 220
  11. List of Abbreviations 223
  12. Index Locorum 221
  13. Index Nominum 223
  14. Index Rerum 221
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The Priority of Locomotion in Aristotle’s Physics