I said you need to invoke the arrangement of the parts in order to explain the behavior of the whole. — Theorem
Insofar as modern science appeals to concepts such organization, arrangement, regularity and structure it is invoking formal causation. — Theorem
It is part of what accounts for the difference between having H20 and just having two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. — Theorem
I'm saying that the concept of formal cause is implicit even within modern science despite the denial of those who don't really understand what it means. — Theorem
These words are only names for whatever is observed. They are all names of what matter is or does. You want to suggest that "arrangement," "regularity" and "structure" are not exhausted by matter and that these things must be evidence for something beyond matter and there is no reason for that conclusion. — Walter Pound
The difference between the modern view and Aristotle's view is that in the modern view, matter implicitly subsumes form (which is what talk of structure, properties and behavior relates to). Whereas Aristotle makes the distinction between matter and form explicit in his definition of substance. — Andrew M
On an Aristotelian view, an independent carbon atom is a hylomorphic substance and, as such, has identifiable characteristics and behavior. But note also that carbon is matter relative to a carbon-dioxide molecule, itself a hylomorphic substance that, in turn, has identifiable characteristics and behavior. — Andrew M
is not correct since Aristotle suggests that "matter" is impotent and can only ever be under the influence of a form. There is an asymmetric relationship between form and matter that I can't imagine most physicalists subscribing to.So the same world is being described, but they are two different frameworks for understanding it. — Andrew M
You want to suggest that "arrangement," "regularity" and "structure" are not exhausted by matter and that these things must be evidence for something beyond matter and there is no reason for that conclusion. — Walter Pound
A carbon atom has in itself the kind of charge that attracts the charges of four hydrogen atoms and an oxygen atom has in itself the kind of charge that attracts two hydrogen atoms; however, a Helium atom has no such charge that could attract hydrogen atoms and all this is inherent to matter and no "forms" are necessary to explain the behavioral differences between carbon atoms and oxygen atoms. — Walter Pound
Aristotle describes matter as only possessing potential and it is the forms that actualize those potentials, but modern physics demonstrates that matter is not a hapless impotent part of reality, but an active participant in why matter behaves as it does; matter has causal powers that determines how matter behaves. — Walter Pound
If the arrangement of the atoms was simply identical with the atoms themselves then all arrangements would be identical. — Theorem
The number and arrangement of the particles just is the form of each element. The matter is the particles, the form is the way that they're arranged. The arrangement and the particles cannot be identical, as discussed above. — Theorem
This is just a simple case of using the same words in different ways. Aristotle does not deny that material objects have intrinsic causal powers. In fact, this is exactly what he does claim. — Theorem
However, for Aristotle all material objects are hylemorphic compounds of matter and form. Matter doesn't exist in its own right. Form doesn't exist in its own right — Theorem
Only material objects (i.e. substances) exist in their own right. — Theorem
To say that modern physics contradicts Aristotle's is just to misunderstand Aristotle's metaphysics. — Theorem
The difference is that a substance is a composite of matter and form instead of reality being composed of just matter.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/physicalism/ — Walter Pound
The problem is that few today argue that carbon is a composite of matter and form; instead, anything that extends in space is considered to be part of the physical world and is classified as matter. Additionally, few today will say that matter's potential is "actualized" by forms and that matter has no causal power of its own- this is why I referenced electric charges and chemical bonds as examples of how Aristotle got matter wrong. — Walter Pound
So this statement:
So the same world is being described, but they are two different frameworks for understanding it.
— Andrew M
is not correct since Aristotle suggests that "matter" is impotent and can only ever be under the influence of a form. There is an asymmetric relationship between form and matter that I can't imagine most physicalists subscribing to. — Walter Pound
My reading of Aristotle. thin enough to be nearly transparent, did not cover anything so deliberate and conscious as his identifying such a problem and trying to resolve it tactically. I'm not arguing here or even asking for citation. But can you expand even a little on that part of Aristotle's thinking? I think of him as mainly an observer and secondarily a thinker about what he has observed. — tim wood
Aristotle thought that matter was eternal and that there was a prime mover that made matter change. — Walter Pound
but what physical reality does is not what physical reality is. — Walter Pound
The debate isn't whether Aristotle's metaphysical framework can be made compatible with modern physics, but whether we have a good reason to even accept it when there are more parsimonious alternatives available. — Walter Pound
Whatever is in actuality has causal power over whatever is in potentiality. Substances that are composed of matter and form have causal power over potentialities. This is not at all like stating that physical reality has causal power since physicalism does not entail hypomorphic composites. — Walter Pound
Because denying it leads to absurdity.If you assume that H2O is a hylomorphic compound or that protons and Carbon atoms are hylomorphic compounds, then you would be correct to say that modern physics does not contradict Aristotle; however, this would be begging the question. What reason is there to suppose that a proton is a composite of form and "matter?" — Walter Pound
Assuming that Aristotle is correct, then whatever one imagines matter to be, it cannot be protons, or quarks or electrons or any fundamental particle or fundamental force, since those things are all composites of form and some nebulous thing called "matter." What informatively can be said of Aristotle's matter is that it is a "thing" that is impotent and exists as a potential for which forms actualize and exists in an asymmetric relationship with forms since matter does not act on forms, but forms do act on matter. — Walter Pound
Right, they are distinct, which is exactly the point! Using your lingo, what a thing "does" (the way it's arranged) is just as real as what it "is" (the particles themselves). — Theorem
Look, if you want to deny the reality of form, go ahead, but you're just unwittingly throwing out all of modern physics with it. Modern physics is just maths after all. — Theorem
Yes, there are good reasons. We've been discussing them already. — Theorem
Your mangling Aristotle’s metaphysics through your misunderstanding. — Theorem
Aristotle would not have denied that entities such as hydrogen and oxygen atoms have their own causal powers. — Theorem
It just that Aristotle had the good sense to realize that you can’t eliminate form from your ontology without courting absurdity. — Theorem
When Aristotle says that matter is the principle of potentiality he means something very specific. — Theorem
Hydrogen and oxygen are concrete, material particulars with their own causal powers. — Theorem
And yet, taken individually, hydrogen and oxygen atoms are only potentially a water molecule. That's what it means to say that they are the material cause of the water molecule. — Theorem
They play the role of matter with respect to the molecule H20 because something else is required in order for them to actualize a water molecule. — Theorem
The number and arrangement of atoms plays the role of formal cause with respect to the water molecule because the it is what the makes the molecule a water molecule as opposed to some other type of molecule. — Theorem
The physical interaction between the atoms that leads to the actualization of the molecule plays the role of efficient cause, and the physical laws that govern the behavior of the atoms plays the role of final cause, reliably “directing” the interaction toward a particular outcome. — Theorem
Because denying it leads to absurdity. — Theorem
Sorry, but you’re just wrong. Aristotle’s definition of matter and form are functional in nature. As such, something counts as matter or form based on the role it plays with respect to something else. We saw this with the H20 example above. Hydrogen and oxygen are matter with respect to H20 because when combined into a particular arrangement/structure they form H20. Hydrogen and oxygen are only potentially H20, they need to be arranged in a certain way to actually become H20. — Theorem
This really shouldn’t be controversial and only seems controversial because you’re failing to distinguish between physics and metaphysics (as I mentioned in my first post). Matter and form are metaphysical principles, not empirical entities. To treat them as empirical concepts is to commit a basic category error. — Theorem
All right then, how do your resolve the being/becoming paradox?I am willing to bet that the majority of philosophers reject Aristotle's metaphysics and they clearly know that metaphysics can do well if it is empirically informed with science. — Walter Pound
That does not follow at all; please google nominalism if you are confused about other possibilities. — Walter Pound
Modern physics goes on fine without dubious metaphysics. — Walter Pound
Your arguments fail since you conflate the is of identity with the is of prediction. — Walter Pound
Question begging. — Walter Pound
For Aristotle, hydrogen and oxygen are NOT "concrete, material particulars with their own causal powers." — Walter Pound
Aristotle believed that the essence of a thing was its substance and necessarily composed of matter and form; therefore, Aristotle would describe an atom, such as hydrogen and oxygen, as a hylomorphic compound of matter and form. — "Walter
Aristotle famously contends that every physical object is a compound of matter and form. — Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
You want to identify the MATERIAL cause of the water molecule as hydrogen and oxygen atoms, but it is a FORM that makes something hydrogen and oxygen; indeed, it seems that all of what one would ordinarily consider as the properties of things are aspects of the form of the thing. Given this fact, what makes the cause "material?" Furthermore, you mention that atoms are potentially molecules, but surely what a thing is "potentially" depends on what it is ACTUALITY like and depends on the properties (or the aspects of the FORM) of the thing- again, I don't see what role matter plays here... — Walter Pound
Again, you just repeat yourself and you confuse the Aristotlean understanding of matter with a physicalist understanding of matter. No physicalist will agree with you that hydrogen and oxygen are just a piece of something like prime matter; that wouldn't make any sense... — Walter Pound
As stated already, what one might think of as the properties of a thing are aspects of the form of the thing. This really should show you that there is no way to ever tell when matter is present and when matter is not present- it just has to be asserted as the case. In truth, it appears that its forms all the way down to the most basic substances that make up reality. — Walter Pound
Aristotle's metaphysics is no help in avoiding absurdity. — Walter Pound
This is a nice sounding story. — Walter Pound
Not controversial? I am willing to bet that the majority of philosophers reject Aristotle's metaphysics and they clearly know that metaphysics can do well if it is empirically informed with science. — Walter Pound
No, it can't be forms all the way down, or there would be no potentiality, and thus no change — Theorem
If reality only consists of "what is", and "what is not" being and not being, then change, or becoming is unintelligible, as it escapes the logical principles of being and not being. — Metaphysician Undercover
Change obtains because things are in motion. — Terrapin Station
Things like "principles of pure potentiality" don't exist outside of our thought. — Terrapin Station
What happened to this part: "Possibilities simply amount to a state not being impossible given contingent facts. "Potential" is often used with a more limited connotation a la possibilities that are statistically more probable than other possibilities"?What accounts for motion if potentiality is unreal? — Theorem
Things like "principles of pure potentiality" don't exist outside of our thought. — Terrapin Station
You think all change can be explained in terms of "things in motion". — Theorem
I doubt that you can explain substantial change, the unity and identity of material objects, life, sensation or cognition — Theorem
but never actually offered a reason for believing this — Theorem
I don't think it needs to be explained. — Terrapin Station
At any rate, there's no way I'd get into a "Does this work/count as an explanation" discussion without you first giving your general criteria for explanations. — Terrapin Station
You'd have to make most of those terms not just gobbledygook first. — Terrapin Station
The only reason we need is that there's zero evidence of extramental principles, or extramental abstracts period. That's not a category mistake. If something exists, there's evidence available of it. — Terrapin Station
No sorry, it's a category mistake to expect empirical evidence for metaphysical entities. — Theorem
matter is the aspect of a thing which does not change when change occurs to a thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's a mistake to expect empirical evidence of existents? — Terrapin Station
I think you're packing several weeks of a course on Aristotle into a few paragraphs. I accept it as ground for thinking about Aristotle's thought on this topic. — tim wood
As I understand your representation of his argument, it goes something like this:
"This thing here, this "X," I called X yesterday and I call it X today. Yet clearly today's X is not the same as yesterday's X. If not the same, then it changed. But if it changed, then what was X is no longer X."
On its face this seems merely a naming problem. Whether the kitten that becomes a cat or Theseus's boat, what they are called is a matter of convention and the understanding of language in context. I'm not telling or arguing, I am instead supposing that Aristotle would have figured this aspect out faster than it takes to write it. — tim wood
Supposing Aristotle dismissed the naming - language - aspect of the paradox as trivial (which I think it is), that leaves his problem of accounting for change. No doubt he observed and was sensitive to change all around him: he could not have questioned the sheer fact of change. In standing beside a mountain stream he would have observed himself captivated by the turbulent inexorability of change flowing and splashing at his feet! — tim wood
It seems to me that invoking a concept of continuous process gets Aristotle from t1 to t2 in complete safety, sophists notwithstanding and in any case mere annoyances (maybe large annoyances, but annoyances nonetheless). The sparkling stream a his feet, the smooth movement of dancers, the wind even in his face, or his kitten that became cat; all these must have been suggestive: why didn't he take on their instruction? — tim wood
As astute a mind as Aristotle's must have grasped this. Indeed did, inasmuch as he recognized a problem that he tried to solve. But his solution I find peculiar in that he retreated to metaphysics, the thinking about the thinking, and then apparently tried to make the μετα, the about which, the real. Had he remained in the physics of the thing, I think he would have buried the problem for all time. I wonder why he didn't. — tim wood
Of course we have his problem's difficult descendant in quantum theory, in which the continuity of the discontinuity of things is resolved in probability. — tim wood
No. In metaphysics, sometimes non-empirical entities are postulated because the denial of their existence leads to absurdities. It's a mistake to ask for empirical evidence for those. — Theorem
If they exist, then empirical evidence would be available for them--even if we haven't discovered it yet. — Terrapin Station
At any rate, what would you take to be an example of this? — Terrapin Station
Theyd have properties, right? — Terrapin Station
What is it with there being so many Aristotelians on this board? Both "prime matter" and "substantial form" are nonsense, as is most Aristotle. — Terrapin Station
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