And I was referring to the notion of substance sans properties. — Dfpolis
Which is another way of saying "mentally separable" — Terrapin Station
You just wrote this: "The point made by Aristotle is that some properties can change, and the whole remains the same kind of thing (fits the same definition) — Terrapin Station
My understanding is that the notion of a substance without properties serves to demonstrate that such a thing cannot exist, and it’s that which makes it necessary to have properties (form) as part of the metaphysical picture together with substance (prime matter). I think Aquinas presents it that way; perhaps Aristotle does also. — AJJ
This statement can be taken phenomenologically or ontologically, but it it certainly does not mean "the whole remains simpiciter." Some aspect of it no longer remains. Still, ostensible unities have a phenomenological continuity to from before to after phenomenological changes. Or, are you denying that? — Dfpolis
The idea that as we abstract properties from wholes we remove them, like picking the raisins out of a pudding, leaving behind an empty, unintelligible matrix which is substance, is an absurd misunderstanding of the Aristotelian doctrine. — Dfpolis
The material beginning with "the whole remains . . . " is presumably about ontology, right? — Terrapin Station
No, it is about what we see. — Dfpolis
For instance, the rubber ball of our example is composed of a certain kind of matter (namely rubber) and a certain kind of form (namely the form of a red, round, bouncy object). The matter by itself isn’t the ball, for the rubber could take on the form of a doorstop, an eraser, or any number of other things. The form by itself isn’t the ball either, for you can’t bounce redness, roundness, or even bounciness down the hallway, these being mere abstractions. It is only the form and matter together that constitute the ball.
"Aristotle famously contends that every physical object is a compound of matter and form."
Matter and form are not a compound. The "two" are inseparable in all respects--logical, physical, conceptual, etc. They're the same thing. — Terrapin Station
Among other issues, Socrates turning blue, putting on pounds, etc. ARE substantial changes. — Terrapin Station
As regards one of these simple 'things that become' we say not only 'this becomes so-and-so', but also 'from being this, comes to be so-and-so', as 'from being not-musical comes to be musical'; as regards the other we do not say this in all cases, as we do not say (1) 'from being a man he came to be musical' but only 'the man became musical'.
When a 'simple' thing is said to become something, in one case (1) it survives through the process, in the other (2) it does not. — Physics i 7
And the accidental distinction is subjective--it depends on one's concept — Terrapin Station
The material beginning with "the whole remains . . . " is presumably about ontology, right? — Terrapin Station
Meanwhile, it turned out that "the whole remains" was saying something about, or that hinged on, definitions. — Terrapin Station
No, it is about what we see. — Dfpolis
So then of what relevance is it to a discussion about Aristotle's ontology? — Terrapin Station
For instance, the rubber ball of our example is composed of a certain kind of matter (namely rubber) and a certain kind of form (namely the form of a red, round, bouncy object). The matter by itself isn’t the ball, for the rubber could take on the form of a doorstop, an eraser, or any number of other things. The form by itself isn’t the ball either, for you can’t bounce redness, roundness, or even bounciness down the hallway, these being mere abstractions. It is only the form and matter together that constitute the ball.
Edward Feser’s book on Aquinas. It clarifies the distinction between matter and form (substance and properties) very well I’d say — AJJ
"form" (eidos or morphê) names what a thing actually is — Dfpolis
So, your absurd claim is that Socrates does not survive being dyed blue or gaining weight. — Dfpolis
At any moment, the matter and the form are identical — Terrapin Station
The mistake of this sort of view is that it sees matter as something that can be given, or can have taken away, properties, while still being the same matter. That's incorrect. — Terrapin Station
Feser, following Aquinas, does not pay enough attention to the difference between artifacts (which have their form imposed from without), and natural objects (which have their form as a result of internal principles of motion). Matter can be passive in the reception of an imposed form, but it has to be active to generate a new natural form. That is the point of my hyle article, — Dfpolis
Just in case we don't get to this, nothing is literally/objectively identical through time. — Terrapin Station
No, they never are. — Dfpolis
What something has the potential to become is never identical with what it is. — Dfpolis
So the rubber injected into the ball mold is not the rubber in the ball? — Dfpolis
You are equivocating yet again. The identity here is not immutability. It is numerical identity — Dfpolis
So, this is what I mean by Aristotle making a mistake about this. You misunderstood my language, but this was what I was saying. Aristotle separates them so that they're not identical. That's a mistake. They're identical. It's incoherent to suppose them to be otherwise. — Terrapin Station
What something has the potential to become is never identical with what it is. — Dfpolis
This is wrong. Even putting aside your wonky ontology of potentials/possibles, which I don't at all agree with, what something is is necessarily identical with something it has the potential to be, otherwise it couldn't be what it is. — Terrapin Station
Things are not NUMERICALLY IDENTICAL through time. "Dynamic continuity" is not identity. — Terrapin Station
I tried to explain this, but you ignored my explanations. — Dfpolis
You are so fixed on justifying your ideas that you are not even reading what I wrote. I said has "the potential to become," not "the potential to be what it is." — Dfpolis
So how about trying to start off with something really simple and obvious (in your view) that you think we could agree on? — Terrapin Station
That would only be the case if you give all of this up and focus on watching TV or something. — Terrapin Station
I am happy to dialog with reasonable people, even if we disagree. Constant equivocation and twisting what is said is not reasonable. — Dfpolis
I hope you're not assuming that I ever thought you were reasonable. — Terrapin Station
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