The Transactional Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics, 2012, p.33 — Wayfarer
This seems like nonsense to me, probably in an attempt to cover up your previous statement, but feel free to tell us where in De Anima Aristotle says this. — Πετροκότσυφας
Now the word actuality has two senses corresponding respectively to the possession of knowledge and the actual exercise of knowledge. It is obvious that the soul is actuality in the first sense, viz that of knowledge as possessed, for both sleeping and waking presuppose the existence of soul...
That is why the soul is the first grade of actuality, of a natural body having life potentially in it. The body so described is a body organized.
These are activities of the soul which involve change. Desires change", it really seems like you're now just making stuff up and contradict yourself. And Aristotle... — Πετροκότσυφας
Yet, a couple of pages back you wrote about how complete and consistent Aristotle's system is. Also, I thought that Aquinas held that the eternity (or not) of the world could not be demonstrated and his belief in the newness of the world was an article of faith. — Πετροκότσυφας
This idea doesn't mesh with Aristotle's idea of there being first and second actualities, since first actualities, themselves being kinds of potentialities, would have to exist both within spacetime and outside of it. Some person's property of being sighted, or of being able to speak French, for instance, are first actualities, while the exercise of sight, or the act of speaking French, are second actualities. When a doctor restores the ability of sight in a formerly blind person, it would be weird to say that this restored ability is something that exists both outside of spacetime (qua potentiality to see) and inside of it (qua first actuality). — Pierre-Normand
It appears like you have not read "On the Soul", if you think that the movement of living things is due to the activity of matter, and not the form which is called "the soul". — Metaphysician Undercover
How can you be theist and not believe in the soul? — Metaphysician Undercover
We need to agree to disagree on what Aristotle means by "hyle. — Dfpolis
2. You are confusing our understanding of life with our understanding of substantial change (aka generation and corruption). The context in which hyle as a determinate, active potency appears is substantial change -- in which one kind of thing becomes another kind of thing. The soul, which Aristotle defines as "the actuality of a potentially living thing" is the form of a single, living kind of thing -- not the principle of dynamic continuity in substantial change. — Dfpolis
You are claiming that in certain types of change, "substantial change", there is a need to assume this "active potency". — Metaphysician Undercover
In natural living things, the source of substantial change is the soul of the living being. — Metaphysician Undercover
My interpretation is that substantial change, generation and corruption, whereby one thing ceases to be, or another thing begins being, requires a soul. — Metaphysician Undercover
Matter, or hyle, is the principle by which the continuity of substance is understood — Metaphysician Undercover
Your ramblings are rather meaningless until we define substantial change. — Metaphysician Undercover
When something ceases to be, or comes to be, this is, by definition, discontinuity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Only a discontinuity in form, not in all relevant aspects of being. — Dfpolis
It cannot come from the matter because then the matter would have both the old form and the new form, at the time prior to the substantial change, and this would be contradictory. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem of being is central to Western metaphysics. Etched sharply in the verses of Parmenides, it took on distinctive colouring in Aristotle as the subject matter of a science expressly labelled 'theological.' For Aristotle, being could not be shared in generic fashion by other natures. As a nature it had to be found not in various species but in a primary instance only. The science specified by the primary nature was accordingly the one science that, under the aspect of being, treated universally of whatever is: it dealt with being qua being.
There is a continuity in the underlying dynamics (dynamis = hyle), — Dfpolis
Which accounts for the possibility of the immortality of the soul, does it not? — Wayfarer
The science specified by the primary nature was accordingly the one science that, under the aspect of being, treated universally of whatever is: it dealt with being qua being.
That is the argument of Parmenides that Aristotle answers with the concept of dynamic potency in hyle. Matter is never either the old or new form. It is always a principle of potency, never a principle of actuality -- that is what form is. Thus, there is no violation of the principle of contradiction. — Dfpolis
Which accounts for the possibility of the immortality of the soul, does it not? — Wayfarer
Strange, cause I quoted a passage where it is argued that the soul can't be moved (only incidentally) and I quoted this passage because you said that the soul changes, which means that it's in motion. — Πετροκότσυφας
If this is what you wanted to say, I think you failed, — Πετροκότσυφας
So, yes, there are different actualities, but, no, there aren't different forms. There's one form, the soul, and it does not change. Aristotle does not seem to allow for formal change in De Anima. — Πετροκότσυφας
When you write "Change is described as an altering of the form, via the contraries, from has to has not", you merely seem to repeat what Aristotle argues against. — Πετροκότσυφας
I can't see how a science of being as being is possible, except perhaps as a phenomenology which would have to start, as Heidegger did, with dasein: human being. — Janus
I suggest that anything has real being that is so constituted as to possess any sort of power either to affect anything else or to be affected, in however small a de-gree, by the most insignificant agent, though it be only once. I am proposing as a mark to distinguish real things that they are nothing but power — Plato
Collingwood also has good arguments to support the view that metaphysics can only be a science of the absolute presuppositions — Janus
Pure being is, as Hegel points out, coterminous with nothingness, and how could we have a science of nothingness? — Janus
Perhaps it could be said that mysticism is a science of nothingness; but in the domain of mysticism there would seem to be no possibility of the kind of definitive intersubjective corroboration that is necessary for a domain of inquiry to count as a science. — Janus
Being, then, is convertible with the capacity to act. Every thought of an existent involves some ability to act: to reflect light, to occupy space and so resist penetration, to affect thought. In fact, any “thing” unable to affect thought would be unknowable, and would never be considered an entity. Since this contrasts sharply with our unreflective concept of a minimal existent as a passive blob, it may help to recall that quantum field theory reveals all matter as constantly oscillating and abuzz with virtual particles.
If we can agree on these starting points, then at least some minimal science of being qua being is possible. — Dfpolis
I reject the notion of a priori knowledge, however fundamental. All that we know can be explained in terms of our awareness of interacting with reality. If I am aware of something acting on me, I am aware that it exists. Since it is acting on me in a specific way, I know it can act in that way and so have some minimal projection of its essence -- of its possible acts. In reflecting on my experience of existence, I see that existence entails principles such as identity, the impossibility of both being and not being at one and the same time in one and the same way, and that a possible being is either actual or not actual.
Then, I see that if my thinking is to apply to being, it must reflect these characteristics of being. These are not laws of thought. They are laws of thought about being. I can think that there is a plane figure that is both a triangle and a square, but there cannot be a plane figure that is both a triangle and a square. — Dfpolis
I have shown you the texts and the logic of the case. — Dfpolis
I would agree that "being is convertible with the capacity to act", but I would say that refers to specific being, being as some kind of being and not to "being as such" or 'pure being". The "unreflective concept of a minimal existent as a passive blob" I agree is unhelpful and couldn't count as 'pure being'. The inability to say just what pure being is, is the reason that Hegel equates the idea of pure being with the idea of nothingness. Nothingness is no-thing-ness, and pure being is no-thing; passive blob or otherwise — Janus
In fact it is exactly on account of science being restricted to the knowledge and understanding of the actions of existents upon one another that Collingwood rejects the possibility of a science of pure being. He says that metaphysics is only viable as a historical science which examines, explicates and analyzes the 'absolute presuppositions' upon which the sciences, from the ancient to the modern, have been based. I must admit i find it hard to disagree with this. — Janus
Reading further, you seem to agree with me on a priori propositions, which leaves me wondering what kinds of things you see as "absolute presuppositions"? — Dfpolis
Perhaps it could be said that mysticism is a science of nothingness; but in the domain of mysticism there would seem to be no possibility of the kind of definitive intersubjective corroboration that is necessary for a domain of inquiry to count as a science. — Janus
I touched on the idea that God is no-thing earlier. Denying the the kind of delimiting specification which characterizes things does not imply that undelimited being (no-thing) is nothing. — Dfpolis
in the domain of mysticism there would seem to be no possibility of the kind of definitive intersubjective corroboration that is necessary for a domain of inquiry to count as a science. — Janus
In spite of the dualistic implications [i.e. of the sensible vs intelligible], this is clearly not intended to be a dualistic alternative to the moral dualism of the Manicheans and other gnostics. Instead, the divide is situated within what is supposed to be a larger, unified hierarchy that begins with absolute unity and progressively unfolds through various stages of increasing plurality and multiplicity, culminating in the lowest realm of isolated and fragmented material objects observed with the senses.
Thus, for Augustine, God is regarded as the ultimate source and point of origin for all that comes below. Equated with Being [Confessions VII.x.16], Goodness [e.g. De Trinitate VIII.5], and Truth [Confessions X.xxiii.33; De Libero Arbitrio III.16], God is the unchanging point which unifies all that comes after and below within an abiding and providentially-ordained rational hierarchy.
Augustine, especially in his earlier works, focuses upon the contrast between the intelligible and the sensible, enjoining his reader to realize that the former alone holds out what we seek in the latter: the world of the senses is intractably private and isolated, whereas the intelligible realm is truly public and simultaneously open to all; the sensible world is one of transitory objects, whereas the intelligible realm contains abiding realities; the sensible world is subject to the consumptive effects of temporality, whereas the intelligible realm is characterized by an a-temporal eternity wherein we are safely removed from the eviscerating prospect of losing what and whom we love.
wonder if that "form of the individual" is anything else than the individual (the substance) and if it is, what it is (and where in De Anima Aristotle talks about it), and if it's not, why fail to say just that. That substances change. — Πετροκότσυφας
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.