Title: The%20Metaphysics%20of%20Aristotle%20
1The Metaphysics of AristotlePlato is dear to
me, but dearer still is truth.An
introductionwww.prshockley.orgDr. Paul R.
Shockley
2Aristotles Background
- Born at Stagira in Northern Greece in 384 BC
- 367-347 BC student at Platos Academy
- He left Athens after not being named head of
Academy following Platos death. - Went to Macedonia became the tutor to Alexander
the Great when Alexander was 12 (343 BC) - After Alexander became Emperor of all Greece,
returned to Athens, established his own school
the Lyceum in 335 BC.
3Background The Philosopher.
- After Alexander died (323 BC), anti-Macedonian
reactions in Athens forced Aristotle to leave, as
he did not wish to experience Socrates fate. - Died one year later in Chalcis.
- Only about 1/4th of Aristotles writings have
survived. Most were lost when the Romans
accidentally burned the great library in
Alexandria, Egypt in 47 BC. Many of Aristotles
greatest works were destroyed. - But we are left with the lecture notes Aristotle
used for teaching at the Lyceum.
4What is the relationship between Plato
Aristotle?
- Three views
- 1. All of Western philosophy is a series of
footnotes to Plato. Aristotle analyzed,
expanded, misinterpreted Platos teachings.
5What is the relationship between Plato
Aristotle?
- Three views
- 2. Aristotle is superior. Aristotle took Platos
ideas and improved them substantively, especially
in the areas of metaphysics, logic, ethics, and
even aesthetics.
6What is the relationship between Plato
Aristotle?
- 3. Distinct worldviews with different starting
points. - Plato focuses his attention on abstract
realities/truths that are to be followed in all
areas of life into a unified knowledge whereas
Aristotle is concerned with the particular,
concrete object and its development, changes, and
purposes. - Aristotle is more concerned with the actual
knowledge of objects than with their logical
unification and abstract transcendence and
rationalistic intelligibility.
7Significant Difference
Platos Allegory of the Cave
- Remember, Plato believed that the intelligible
realm is more real than the sensible realm. - Plato believed that the eternal, immutable forms
constitute reality, transcendent of the sensible
realm of flux.
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9Aristotle Claims the Opposite
- Plato abstracted the form from the actual object.
- Imagination and Beliefs dominated sensible realm
whereas reasoning and knowledge was found in
intelligible realm. - Thus, true knowledge was found in the
intelligible realm.
Plato School of Athens by Raphael
10Aristotle Claims the Opposite
- Aristotle contends that is the concrete,
particular, actual, and individual objects or
things that are real. - You are a particular. A dog is a particular. An
Ant is a particular. - Thus, for Aristotle, metaphysics is the study of
particular, individual concrete substances.
Aristotle School of Athens by Raphael
11Aristotles Critique
Aristotle
- Abstract forms are only useless copies of actual
things. - Theory of forms does not explain the existence
and changes that take place in concrete objects. - Theory of Forms sets up a dualism between world
of intelligibility and world of flux. This theory
does not explain how the both of them are
related. - While Aristotle does not reject the forms, but he
does rejecting the idea that we are to separate
the from from the actual existence of the
particular object.
12Major Ideas to Know
13Major Ideas to Know
14Major Ideas to Know
15Major Ideas to Know Potentiality Actuality-
which accounts for developmental changes in
substances.
16Major Ideas to Know Potentiality Actuality-
which accounts for developmental changes in
substances.
17Explanatory Principles of Things Their Changes.
18The following four principles determine the
nature of an individual object in cosmos (whether
natural or man-made)
19The relationship between the Four Causes
20Aristotles View of the Universe
- Everything is connected causally with everything
else as material or formal cause. - Since the universe is characterized by eternal
change or motion, it requires an uncaused cause
or Prime Mover that is eternal. - An eternal uncaused cause must exist in order to
account for all the change and motion in the
universe.
21Cosmological Argument The Universe had a
beginning caused by something beyond the universe.
22Aristotles God
- Eternal
- Immutable
- Spiritual
- Distinct from universe.
- Not a personal God
- Not an object of worship
23Everything Has Purpose
- Aristotles view of reality/existence is that
everything is teleological, that is, everything
in universe has its own form, its own end, its
own purpose (telos) to fulfill. - According to Aristotle, everyone one of us have
purpose, an end to fulfill.
24Everything Has Purpose
- Thus, for Aristotle, the good is whatever the
nature of a thing aims at as its formal cause. - What is your good? It is what man by his nature
seeks happiness. But what is happiness? - Is our telos a life of pleasure?
- Is our telos a life of honor?
- Is our telos a life of wealth?
- Is our telos a life of power?
25What is our Highest good?
- Aristotle argues that pleasure, wealth, honor, or
power are only a means to happiness. - Happiness, for Aristotle, as our highest good,
consists in the fulfillment of our function as
humans. - The fulfillment of our function is the activity
of soul in accordance with virtue. - We will pursue this last theme when we examine
virtue ethics.
26 Personal Favorite quotes from Aristotle
I count him braver who overcomes his desires
than him who conquers his enemies for the
hardest victory is over self. At his best,
man is the noblest of all animals separated from
law and justice he is the worst. Good habits
formed at youth make all the difference. In
all things of nature there is something of the
marvelous. It is the mark of an educated
mind to be able to entertain a thought without
accepting it.