Physiologia: Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian ThoughtCornell University Press, 2000 - 426 pages Sixteenth-century Aristotelianism was the culmination of four centuries of commentary and criticism. Physiologia is one of the first books to provide an accessible and comprehensive guide to that tradition in natural philosophy. In an incisive and readable treatment, Dennis Des Chene illuminates the continuities and disruptions between medieval and modern philosophy and promotes a new understanding of the philosophical setting in which modern notions of science emerged. |
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Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian Thought Dennis Des Chene. Physiologia Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian Thought DENNIS DES CHENE PHYSIOLOGIA PHYSIOLOGIA Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and ...
Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian Thought Dennis Des Chene. Physiologia Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian Thought DENNIS DES CHENE PHYSIOLOGIA PHYSIOLOGIA Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and ...
Page vii
... Aristotelian and Cartesian psychology augmented itself into a book devoted to Aristotelian and Cartesian philosophy of nature . There was , it turned out , no compendious study of the sixteenth- and early seventeenth - century ...
... Aristotelian and Cartesian psychology augmented itself into a book devoted to Aristotelian and Cartesian philosophy of nature . There was , it turned out , no compendious study of the sixteenth- and early seventeenth - century ...
Page viii
Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian Thought Dennis Des Chene. study the Aristotelians : the language , the disputational format of their writ- ings , the dependence , explicit or not , of later texts upon earlier texts ...
Natural Philosophy in Late Aristotelian and Cartesian Thought Dennis Des Chene. study the Aristotelians : the language , the disputational format of their writ- ings , the dependence , explicit or not , of later texts upon earlier texts ...
Page 1
... Aristotle calls the " principles " of nature : matter and form , the four causes , natural change , and nature itself . To those principles the Aristotelian commentaries and cursus I study in the first part of this work devoted much of ...
... Aristotle calls the " principles " of nature : matter and form , the four causes , natural change , and nature itself . To those principles the Aristotelian commentaries and cursus I study in the first part of this work devoted much of ...
Page 2
... Aristotelians spent as much , and sometimes more , labor and ink on the definition of natural change , the intension and remission of qualities , the existence of substantial form.2 Aristotelian phi- losophy of nature , moreover ...
... Aristotelians spent as much , and sometimes more , labor and ink on the definition of natural change , the intension and remission of qualities , the existence of substantial form.2 Aristotelian phi- losophy of nature , moreover ...
Contents
Natural Change | 17 |
Motus Potentia Actus | 21 |
21 Potentia and Actus | 24 |
22 Independent Existence of Motus | 34 |
23 Action and Passion | 40 |
24 Active and Passive Potentice | 46 |
Form Privation and Substance | 53 |
31 Principles of Change | 55 |
62 Existence of Ends | 177 |
63 Character of the Final Cause | 186 |
64 Teleological Reasoning | 200 |
Nature and Counternature | 212 |
71 The Uses of Nature | 213 |
72 Individual Natures | 227 |
73 Artifacts Human and Divine | 239 |
Bodies in Motion | 253 |
32 Substantial Form and Prime Matter | 64 |
33 Form as Substance | 76 |
Matter Quantity and Figure | 81 |
41 The Essence of Matter | 83 |
42 Quantity and Prime Matter | 97 |
43 Figure and Other Qualities | 109 |
The Structure of Physical Substance | 122 |
51 Matter and Form Distinguished | 124 |
52 Substantial Union | 134 |
Dispositions | 138 |
54 Substantial Form and Active Powers | 157 |
Finality and Final Causes | 168 |
61 Varieties of End | 171 |
Motion and Its Causes | 255 |
81 The Definition and Mode of Existence of Motion | 257 |
82 Persistence Conatus and Quantity of Motion | 272 |
The Problem of Force | 312 |
Parts of Matter | 342 |
91 Extensive Quantity and the Nature of Matter | 345 |
92 Substance and Space | 354 |
the Sufficiency of Extension | 377 |
World without Ends | 391 |
399 | |
406 | |
415 | |
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Common terms and phrases
accidental forms accidents according action active powers actual actus animals argues argument Aristotelian Aristotelian physics Aristotle Aristotle's artifacts Averroes Avicenna body called central texts Coimbra In Phys Coimbrans collision complete substance conatus conception concurrence conservation contrary corporeal substance created creation Cursus defined denote deny Descartes Descartes's determined dispositio dispositions distinct distinguished divine effect efficient cause ends essence existence extension figure final cause fluxus Fonseca In meta force formal Garber God's heat human individual inhere insofar instances intensive quantity John of St kind Leibniz material substance matter and form Mersenne Metaphysics mode motus move natural change Ockham Opera passive potentia patient perfect philosophers prime matter principle qualities quantity of motion question reason relation res extensa resistance respect rest Rule second causes sense soul space species Suárez Disp substantial form suppose terminus things Thomas Thomist tion Toletus In Phys virtue Zabarella
Popular passages
Page 1 - Si les phénomènes ne sont pas enchaînés les uns aux autres, il n'ya point de philosophie. Les phénomènes seraient tous enchaînés, que l'état de chacun d'eux pourrait être sans permanence. Mais si l'état des êtres est dans une vicissitude perpétuelle ; si la nature est encore à l'ouvrage, malgré la chaîne qui lie les phénomènes, il n'ya point de philosophie. Toute notre science...