Aristotelian Forms and Laws of Nature
Aristotelian Forms and Laws of Nature
Author(s): Alexander R. PrussSubject(s): Philosophy, History of Philosophy
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Szczecińskiego
Keywords: Aristotle; forms; laws of nature; metaphysics; ontology; matter
Summary/Abstract: Aristotelian Forms are mysterious entities. I offer an account of them as entities that makes the laws of nature be laws. The Aristotelian ontology is fundamentally an anti-Humean ontology: Not only are laws a reality over and beyond regularities, but that in virtue of which they are laws is in fact that which is most truly called substance. If we further take it, say, on ethical grounds, that there are individual forms, then we get a multiplicity of substances in the universe, including multiple substances of the same sort, and the laws of nature end up being grounded in their powers. But we have global regularities, then, only because there is coordination between the lawmakers, or forms, of the solo doings of individual entities, a coordination that entails global patterns.
Journal: Analiza i Egzystencja: czasopismo filozoficzne
- Issue Year: 2013
- Issue No: 24
- Page Range: 115-132
- Page Count: 24
- Language: English