I am a college student studying philosophy, and currently I have a lot of misunderstandings about Aristotle's Unmoved Mover.
1. How is the unmoved mover not a conraditction of everything else Aristolte proposes in the Metaphysics?
2. In this theory, how does the unmoved mover cause motion? — Mattt
It is a perfect circular motion, which by the nature of a circle, has no beginning or end. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's pure actuality. That's why their activity is thinking; Aristotle does not considers activity a motion. — Πετροκότσυφας
1. Motion exists
2. Anything in motion must have been brought into motion by something else
2a. A thing cannot cause itself to move (this needs to be either an assumption or inference from 2 in order for Aristotle to avoid obviously circular argumentation)
3. However, there cannot be an infinite chain of agents causing movement
4. Therefore, there must be something that causes motion which itself is not caused to move. — Mentalusion
He doesn't have it both ways. He differentiates between an efficient cause and a final cause. If the prime mover was an efficient cause, it would be an uncaused caused and he would have it both ways. That's why in his system motion is eternal as are prime movers which are final causes, not efficient causes. — Πετροκότσυφας
Do you believe that any agency can occur in absence of motive(s) for that which the agents perform (think, act, etc.)? — javra
However, when all is said and done, I do not understand (and that is the pejorative "i don't understand") how one type of cause can affect another type cause such that the explanation for how that happens is not either contradictory or question begging. — Mentalusion
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