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with respect to its parts, since in contradistinction to something that under-
goes a locomotion it does not change in place as a whole. The growing
thing’s parts are changing in place19 and thus need to be taken as the true
subject of the locomotion that occurs while the whole is growing. The sub-
ject of the growth in this sense is different from the subject of the locomo-
tion that occurs at the same time. The actual subject of this locomotion is a
part of the subject of the change in quantity.
If this is correct, then there basically seems to be a way in which Aristotle
may rightly claim that whatever is increasing or decreasing in size in a cer-
tain sense is also undergoing a change in place. But, as I will now show,
there is a problem with this solution. The problem is that there are cases of
growth or diminution in which the subject seems to undergo change in
place as a whole in virtue of its change in size. But this would clearly contra-
dict Aristotle’s claim that although a change in the size of a subject goes
hand in hand with a change in place, this is only true in the sense that it
does so with respect to its parts. In dealing with this problem we will get to
know an important feature of locomotion, namely that the parts of what
undergoes this kind of change strictly speaking do not need to change their
spatial order in any way whatsoever. Or, to put it another way, it does not
follow from the fact that something x undergoes a locomotion that x’s parts
change, since change in place per se does not entail any other change.
4.2.3 Change in place implies no change
in the spatial order of the subject’s parts
As we have seen, Aristotle thinks that what grows changes in place only
with respect to its parts. However, it is also true that what changes in place
as a whole does so with respect to all of its parts. Now, if something changes
in quantity as a whole, then according to GC I 5 all of its parts also change
in quantity.20
Suppose, for instance, an infant is growing as a whole. The change in
place of that which grows, in this case of the infant, is the change in place of
its parts. The change in place of the parts again occurs in virtue of their
change in quantity. Now if the infant is growing as a whole, and therefore
all parts of its body are growing, then it seems that all of these parts also
need to change in place in virtue of their growing. Since the changes in
place of the parts derive from the growth of the same, one might think that
the change in place of all the parts comprises a change in place of the infant
19 τὰ μόρια μεταβάλλει κατὰ τόπον, CG I 5, 320a21–22.
20 This is one of the criteria that according to GC I 5 need to be fulfilled for it to be said
that growth or diminution has occurred. See GC I 5, 321a18–21.
78 Locomotion necessarily accompanies each of the other kinds of change
ISBN Print: 9783525253069 — ISBN E-Book: 9783647253060
© 2014, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht GmbH & Co. KG, Göttingen
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
- Acknowledgements 9
- 1. Introduction 10
- 2. The importance of the primary kind of change 14
- 3. Change in quality and quantity of living beings depends on loco-motion, but not vice versa 42
- 4. Locomotion necessarily accompanies each of the other kinds of change, but not vice versa 71
- 4.1 Overview 71
- 4.2 What changes in quantity changes with respect to place 73
- 4.3 What undergoes generation or corruption changes with respect to place 89
- 4.4 What changes in quality changes with respect to place 98
- 4.4.1 Overview 98
- 4.4.2 What does it mean that condensation and rarefaction are principles of quality? 100
- 4.4.3 Every alteration involves a change in the four basic qualities 104
- 4.4.4 Every change in the four basic qualities involves con- densation or rarefaction 108
- 4.4.5 Condensation and rarefaction are forms of aggregation and segregation 110
- 4.4.6 What changes in quality changes with respect to place 112
- 4.4.7 Conclusion 113
- 4.5 Conclusion 113
- 5. All changes depend on the first locomotion, but not vice versa 115
- 6. Locomotion has temporal priority 144
- 6.1 Overview 144
- 6.2 Locomotion has priority in time, since it is the only change eternals can undergo 146
- 6.3 Objection: Locomotion is the last of all changes in perishable things 148
- 6.4 Coming to be presupposes an earlier locomotion 150
- 6.5 The locomotion of the sun as a cause of generation 154
- 6.6 Conclusion 162
- 7. Locomotion is prior in essence 164
- 7.1 Locomotion is prior in essence, since it is last in coming to be 164
- 7.2 Locomotion alone preserves its subject’s essence 186
- 7.2.1 Overview 186
- 7.2.2 Locomotion does not change its subject’s being 188
- 7.2.3 Locomotion preserves its subject’s essence best 190
- 7.2.4 Making x depart from its essence by being part of a change in essence? 195
- 7.2.5 Change in quality or quantity in principle may result in a change in essence 202
- 7.3 Conclusion: Locomotion’s priority in essence 207
- 8. Conclusion 211
- Bibliography 220
- List of Abbreviations 223
- Index Locorum 221
- Index Nominum 223
- Index Rerum 221