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objection such a change occurs is due to the fact that a human being is per-
forming locomotion and not that a change in place is occurring.
But our analysis of the objection has made it clear that the claim about
locomotion not involving any change with respect to the inner spatial rela-
tion of its subject’s part does not imply that in the course of locomotion the
subject’s parts do not change for whatever reason with respect to their inner
spatial order; the claim is that change in place per se, as we have seen, does
not necessarily entail that such a change of the inner spatial order of the
subject’s parts must occur, while this is the case for every occurrence of
growth, and, as we will see later on, of each of the other kinds of change as
well. Contrary to what one might have thought, therefore, the example of a
man walking does not show that I am mistaken in my understanding of
locomotion as a change in which strictly speaking the relation between the
subject’s inner parts change in no way, an understanding that I think
underlies Aristotle’s discussion of locomotion and growth in GC I 5 and
Phys. VIII 7.
Confronting the change in place that occurs when something grows or
diminishes with the locomotion of the revolving sphere thus helped us to
spell out one of the features that make locomotion in the full sense so
unique among the different kinds of change, namely that the inner structure
of what undergoes locomotion as a whole is left completely untouched by
locomotion. This insight is far from being trivial. For among other things it
is because of this special character that locomotion is the only kind of
change eternal things can undergo, which, as we will see later on, is another
reason for its primacy, as the fifth argument for the priority of locomotion
shows.29
4.2.5 Compatibility with the irreducibility of the kinds of change
As I have shown, Aristotle correctly claims that what changes in size in a
sense also changes with respect to place. Yet, as pointed out at the begin-
ning of this chapter, it is often assumed that the second argument does not
present Aristotle’s point of view, but rather that of his predecessors, espe-
cially of certain Presocratic thinkers. Those who make this claim, however,
mostly base their hypothesis exclusively on what is said in the first and sec-
ond sub-arguments and either ignore what is stated in the part on growth
and diminution, or, at least in one case, assert that this is a more or less
superfluous addition that does not really fit into the supposedly Presocratic
context.30
29 For this see section 7.2.
30 For the latter see Zekl (1988), 289, n.114, who claims that the part dealing with growth
What changes in quantity changes with respect to place 85
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