An Ontology for the In-Between of Motion: Aristotle’s Reaction to Zeno’s Arguments
An Ontology for the In-Between of Motion: Aristotle’s Reaction to Zeno’s Arguments
Author(s): Michel CrubellierSubject(s): Ontology
Published by: Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza
Keywords: Aristotle; Aristotle’s Physics; change. continuous; dialectic; infinite; motion; ontology; time; Zeno of Elea;
Summary/Abstract: This paper proposes an interpretation of Books V and VI of Aristotle’s Physics as being (at least partly) a reaction to Zeno’s four “arguments against motion” that Aristotle expounds and discusses in Phys. VI 9. On the basis of a detailed textual analysis of that chapter, I show that Zeno’s arguments rest on a frame of a priori notions such as part and whole, in contact, between, limit, etc., which Aristotle takes over in order to account for the inner structure (here called “the In-Between”) common to all facts of motion and change. That frame allows him to develop a specific ontology for that inner structure – although it exists only potentially according to the Aristotelian orthodoxy – because he needs such an ontology in order to vindicate the reality of motion and change.
Journal: Peitho. Examina Antiqua
- Issue Year: 12/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 123-150
- Page Count: 28
- Language: English