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supposes that things would consist of atoms, an assumption that, as is
pointed out for instance in GC I 2, leads to a number of serious problems,
and is therefore untenable in Aristotle’s view.27 Thus, what seemed at first
sight to be an answer to the objection does not help us to deal with the
objection after all.
What really solves the problem is clarifying the fact that the case of loco-
motion presented in the objection, i.e. my walking from A to B, is a special
case of locomotion, namely that of a certain kind of animal, more specifi-
cally, a human being, and thus involves elements that do not belong to loco-
motion as such. A man performing locomotion usually does so by moving
his limbs (thereby changing the relation in which its parts stand to each
other). Yet, this in no way implies that this is the case for locomotion in
general. If one merely thinks about my change in place from A to B and
ignores the fact that I undergo locomotion as a human being—a living
organism with arms and legs and with blood that circulates through the
body—and in this sense abstracts from what is accidental and hence irrele-
vant to this change qua change in place, one can see that the change in the
spatial order of the subject’s part does not belong to locomotion per se; sup-
pose I could move in space by hovering over the ground. Suppose, further-
more, in this way I could hover from place A to place B without moving in
any other sense28 in one perfect rectilinear motion: as in the case of the
pen, which we considered at the end of 4.2.3, in this case as well there is no
reason to assume that any of my parts changes with respect to its inner-spa-
tial order. The fact that this occurs when I walk from my office to the cafe-
teria is due to the specific way in which I as a human being move; but,
again, locomotion per se does not entail any such change of the parts and it
does not follow from the mere fact that something x moves from A to B that
x’s inner parts change their spatial order. But another example suffices to
show that the change of the inner spatial order of my parts when I walk has
its reason in my specific way of performing locomotion and not in the nat-
ure of change in place as such. Suppose I would like to go out for a run, but
since it is cold and raining outside I decide to exercise on the treadmill in
my apartment. Thus, in moving my limbs on the treadmill in the fashion in
which human beings usually do in order to run or walk from place A to B, I
change the inner spatial order of my parts without ever leaving the place
where I am performing this exercise.
It is clear therefore that locomotion per se does not entail a change in the
inner spatial order of its subject’s parts; the fact that in the aforementioned
27 For this discussion see GC I 2, 315b24–317a17.
28 Of course, in this example one also needs to ignore the fact while I am hovering over
the ground, certain changes in the inner spatial order of my body’s parts nonetheless occur,
e.g. my blood circulates and so on.
84 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