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Aristotle's Physics

Aristotle's <I>Physics</I>

Aristotle's <I>Physics</I>

A Critical Guide
Mariska Leunissen , University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
March 2018
Paperback
9781108454186

    Aristotle's study of the natural world plays a tremendously important part in his philosophical thought. He was very interested in the phenomena of motion, causation, place and time, and teleology, and his theoretical materials in this area are collected in his Physics, a treatise of eight books which has been very influential on later thinkers. This volume of new essays provides cutting-edge research on Aristotle's Physics, taking into account recent changes in the field of Aristotle in terms of its understanding of key concepts and preferred methodology. The contributions reassess the key concepts of the treatise (including nature, chance, teleology, art, and motion), reconstruct Aristotle's methods for the study of nature, and determine the boundaries of his natural philosophy. Due to the foundational nature of Aristotle's Physics itself, the volume will be a must-read for all scholars working on Aristotle.

    • Offers new, cutting-edge interpretations of Aristotle's Physics
    • Reassesses key notions in Aristotle's natural philosophy to provide a new understanding of fundamental concepts
    • Provides new perspectives on Aristotle's methodology in the natural sciences and on their relation to other sciences in Aristotle

    Product details

    March 2018
    Paperback
    9781108454186
    309 pages
    230 × 153 × 18 mm
    0.48kg
    1 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction Mariska Leunissen
    • 1. How to study natural bodies: Aristotle's Mέθοδος James G. Lennox
    • 2. Aristotle on interpreting nature Sean Kelsey
    • 3. Nature as a principle of change Stasinos Stavrianeas
    • 4. Aristotle on chance as an accidental cause James Allen
    • 5. Man from man but not bed from bed: nature, art and chance in Physics II Margaret Scharle
    • 6. In defense of the craft analogy: artifacts and natural teleology Charlotte Witt
    • 7. The origins of Aristotle's natural teleology in Physics II Robert Bolton
    • 8. Substantial generation in Physics I. 5-7 Devin Henry
    • 9. A dynamic ontology: on how Aristotle arrived at the conclusion that eternal change accomplishes Ousia Diana Quarantotto
    • 10. Aristotle's processes David Charles
    • 11. Physics V-VI versus VIII: unity of change and disunity in the Physics Jacob Rosen
    • 12. Perfection and the physiology of habituation according to Physics VII.3 Mariska Leunissen
    • 13. Self-motion as other-motion in Aristotle's Physics Ursula Coope
    • 14. The argument of Physics VIII Andrea Falcon.
      Contributors
    • Mariska Leunissen, James G. Lennox, Sean Kelsey, Stasinos Stavrianeas, James Allen, Margaret Scharle, Charlotte Witt, Robert Bolton, Devin Henry, Diana Quarantotto, David Charles, Jacob Rosen, Ursula Coope, Andrea Falcon

    • Editor
    • Mariska Leunissen , University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

      Mariska Leunissen is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Her recent publications include Explanation and Teleology in Aristotle's Science of Nature (2010).