Recently there has been an increase in power ontologies, which is reminiscent of Aristotelian and Scholastic metaphysics, especially since powers are "internal" to things. Power (or dispositions) act like a causal web. — darthbarracuda
But there is also the immanent metaphysics of Aristotle where form and purpose are developmentally emergent and self-organising regularities. So the world itself must develop intelligible order. And having done so, that order is imposed locally everywhere to create substantial being. — apokrisis
Formal and final cause are better understood as contextual properties or powers rather than intrinsic ones. Material and efficient cause are rightfully located within substantial objects. But the shaping and directing of matter is something that comes from without. — apokrisis
Did Aristotle argue for self-generalizing habits? I thought that was Peirce's addition - after all, Aristotle did think the universe was eternal if I remember correctly, and that there were distinct natural kinds, something that would have come into conflict with evolution and general cosmological findings but Peirce managed to fill with his idea of habits. — darthbarracuda
But if these powers exist outside of a substantial form, how do they exist? The mother that aborts the baby still has powers herself, namely, to abort the baby. — darthbarracuda
I like Heil's version: properties are dual-nature, both a quality and a disposition. — darthbarracuda
So yes, there is a duality here. But of bottom-up vs top-down modes of causality. And substantial objects are what arise inbetween as the causal actors (in a relatively a-causal void). — apokrisis
So there is a tension between the bottom-up causality of material and efficient causes and the top-down causality of formal and final causation. — darthbarracuda
But what needs to still be explained is why the whole drama of evolution played out the way it did: why such-and-such happened and not something else, and not just by an appeal to material/efficient causation (i.e. science). — darthbarracuda
Thus what I am seeing as final causes are not just tendencies or habits as a system evolves but as seemingly static "laws of nature" — darthbarracuda
Which is why I don't think dynamicism can fully account for all of nature. The plant can wave in the wind but the roots keep it stuck in the ground as they are themselves static. — darthbarracuda
But my account requires stasis as well as flux. It just says stasis emerges via a limitation on flux. Whereas you have the Parmidean puzzle of how stasis could ever allow change. — apokrisis
When we conceptualize flux, we imagine things like waves, wind, changing patterns, orbits, chaos, etc. But although this picture's contents are changing, the concept itself is not. What is being presented to us - the given-ness - is the same. — darthbarracuda
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