Aristotle's Theory of Actuality

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SUNY Press, Jan 1, 1995 - Philosophy - 270 pages
This is an attack on Aristotle showing that, after his revolt against Plato's separate ideas, he formulated his actualistic ontology denying the reality of all potential things and holding that only actual things are real. In a misplaced or mistaken drive toward consistency, Aristotle then applied this ontology to other areas of his philosophy with the result that many of his major theses are essentially vacuous

When applied in his physics, this led to the view that all natural motions are uncaused and therefore self-explanatory. Related consequences were Aristotle's physical indeterminism, holism, and the true meaning of his teleology and theory of god. In his logical theory Aristotle presented a system of empty explanations and argued that these are the only scientific explanations possible. Since mathematics appears to deal with non-actual entities, Aristotle formulated an actualistic theory of mathematics, leading to the first notion of a universal mathematics. This book shows how actualism served as the foundation of an anti-informationist philosophy of nature, science, logic, and mathematics.

These consequences make Aristotle's actualism the natural framework for twentieth-century science and its philosophy.

 

Contents

Logical Causality and Priority of the Actual
59
Necessity Syllogism and Scientific Knowledge
129
Inconsistent Potentials The Philosophy of Mathematics
159
Notes
190
84
213
92
224
Bibliography
231
Index of Passages
259
95
263
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About the author (1995)

Zev Bechler is Professor of History and Philosophy of Science in the Institute for History and Philosophy of Science at Tel-Aviv University.

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