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three kinds of change is necessarily accompanied by a change in place, but
not vice versa. The third argument makes use of the fact that all changes in
the cosmos depend on the eternal change that is directly caused by the first
unmoved mover, and thereby establishes that the other kinds of change
depend on locomotion insofar as they depend on the first eternal motion.
That is to say, the third argument has presented another reason for saying
that an asymmetric relation of ontological dependence holds between loco-
motion and the other kinds of change, and hence for saying that locomo-
tion must be the primary kind of change. This argument in particular made
it possible to see that it is the special characteristics of change in place,
namely the fact that it can be one, continuous and eternal, that is essentially
connected with the fact that the change that has its primary source in the
first unmoved mover must be locomotion.
5.5 Conclusion
What has this chapter shown? First of all we have seen that as Aristotle
states explicitly the third argument, too, is supposed to make clear that
locomotion has ontological priority over the other kinds of change, in other
words that there can be locomotion without any of the other kinds of
change, while the converse does not hold.
The argument starts from the assumption of the eternal existence of
change. Against the background of the discussion of Phys. VIII, it has
become clear that change needs to be eternal in virtue of their being one
continuous and eternal change and not, as one might have thought, by
there being a succession of different changes: Aristotle, in referring to the
eternal change, clearly means the one and continuous change of which the
first unmoved mover is the primary cause and which rules out the second
way in which the existence of eternal change can be explained. In order for
this to be clear, it was necessary to understand in what way a change may
be said to be one, continuous and thus eternal in the necessary sense. The
outcome was that only changes that are one with respect to their time, their
subject, and also to the genus and species of the change are one without
qualification and continuous. In the penultimate step I showed why neither
change in quality, nor in quantity, nor in substance can form one continu-
ous and eternal change, and that this is only possible for locomotion, or
more precisely, circular locomotion.
The final conclusion then is that change in place is ontologically prior to
all of the other kinds of change insofar as the primary change of which the
first unmoved mover is the direct source and on which all other occur-
rences of any change ultimately depend can only be a locomotion. Since this
142 All changes depend on the first locomotion, but not vice versa
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