Is Aristotle’s Place Really a Surface? On Aristotle’s Concepts of Place in Physics IV and Categories 6
Is Aristotle’s Place Really a Surface? On Aristotle’s Concepts of Place in Physics IV and Categories 6
Author(s): Rita SalisSubject(s): Ancient Philosphy, Philosophy of Science
Published by: Универзитет у Нишу
Keywords: Aristotle; Physics; Place; Extension; Surface; Three-dimensionality
Summary/Abstract: The attribution to Aristotle of the concept of place as bi-dimensional is firstly based on the identification of place with a surface, supposedly carried out by Aristotle in Physics IV. The identity of place with surface would indeed imply that place were missing the third dimension of depth, for the notion of surface was historically related to the notion of plane. Hence, since natural beings are, by definition, moving beings, and they have a three-dimensional extension, the doctrine of the bi-dimensionality of place would imply the impossibility to explain movement. Depth of place also seems to be neglected in another passage, in which Aristotle rejects the third definition of place as an extension between the extremities of the contained body. Scholars who admit the bidimensionality of Aristotelian place emphasize the contrast between the Aristotelian theory of place expounded in Physics and the theory contained in Categories, where the three-dimensionality of place is explicitly admitted. The aim of this paper is to try to convey additional arguments in favour of the three-dimensionality of Aristotelian place, based on the criterion of a more literal reading of the Aristotelian text.
Journal: FACTA UNIVERSITATIS - Philosophy, Sociology, Psychology and History
- Issue Year: 17/2018
- Issue No: 03
- Page Range: 159-167
- Page Count: 9
- Language: English