but I am still curious to know how Aristotle would answer that question. — Walter Pound
What exactly is matter in Aristotle's eyes? — Walter Pound
It seems that matter has no features of its own and,... — Walter Pound
MU is going to find you and eat you! — tim wood
. If the τελος of a kitten is to become a cat, then the part of a kitten that is not yet a cat is matter - imperfect form - and the part that is cat is not matter, but cat. — tim wood
A way to think of it is that we don't perceive form or matter, we perceive substances (like apples, people, etc.) Those substance have properties (form) that can be identified. But a substance is more than a formalism, it is also material - the substance pushes back when you push on it. This is Aristotle's hylomorphism. — Andrew M
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It sounds like Aristotle didn't have too much to go on in terms of the natural world and of course, we can't blame him for that since he lived so long ago. I think that back then, the conclusion most would come to is that matter stays the way it is, and only forces of nature could change how matter is. — TogetherTurtle
He did have access to the writings of the atomists, right? — Marchesk
Is there anything that distinguishes matter in the hylomorphic composite of a tree or that of gold? Or is there nothing about matter that distinguishes the matter in the substance of an apple or that of gold? — Walter Pound
What can be said of the matter that isn't just, "well, it is part of a substance..." or "its the part of the substance that makes the form feel solid..." — Walter Pound
A problem with this is we perceive properties. So if properties are form, we perceive form. Also "pushes back when you push on it" is a property, a property that we perceive. — Terrapin Station
What exactly is matter in Aristotle's eyes? — Walter Pound
matter is the aspect of a thing which does not change when change occurs to a thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
It is therefore the principle which provides for the reality of the temporal continuity of existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
Imagine a changing thing. At one moment it is assumed to have a definite form, and at the next moment it is assume to have a slightly different definite form. — Metaphysician Undercover
Strictly speaking, from a logic of formal identity, at the second moment it is not the same thing as it was at the first moment. — Metaphysician Undercover
The idea that it is logically necessary that these are two distinct things, provided fodder for sophistry and paradoxes of infinite regress — Metaphysician Undercover
So Aristotle wanted a law of identity which would corroborate our observed experience, and allow that one and the same thing could have temporal extension despite the fact that changes occur to that thing during the time of its existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
So he posited "matter" as the underlying thing which does not change, providing for the observed temporal continuity of existence of a thing, — Metaphysician Undercover
despite the fact that the thing's form is continually changing. — Metaphysician Undercover
For Aristotle, what makes a gold nugget a gold nugget is the form of gold and what makes the silver nugget a silver nugget is the form of silver, but what can be said specifically about matter in Aristotle's metaphysics? — Walter Pound
I don't think so since forms make matter what it is. — Walter Pound
Additionally, could you recommend me either videos or books on Aristotle that can help explain his thought to me? Thanks! — Walter Pound
This tells me what matter does and not what matter is. — Walter Pound
If the form is not material, then why suppose that the form changes at all when time passes? We don't see how immaterial entities behave and we don't see how forms behave alone as Aristotle believed matter and form must exist together. — Walter Pound
Given that the substance of the Rubik's cube is a composite of form and matter and that the matter is the only thing that we see change, why should the Rubik's cube change its identity when it is being altered? — Walter Pound
Unless we start qualifying what it means for a substance's matter to be a substance's matter, why does the spatial arrangement of the Rubik's cube's "matter" determine whether the Rubik's cube is the same as it was before the toddler's manipulation? — Walter Pound
However, from your previous sentence, it seems that Aristotle wanted to say that although a thing's matter changed, such as Theseus' ship, it does not mean that the thing itself was altered. — Walter Pound
When you say, "does not change" do you mean to say that matter does not come into or out of being or that matter is static? I have heard that Aristotle subscribed to a relational theory of time and if Aristotle really believed that matter did not change, then that would suggest that matter is timeless. — Walter Pound
If an apple is a substance, and a substance is a composite of matter and form, then I only experience a change in the substance's matter when I cut the apple in half with a knife. I don't experience a change in the substance's form. — Walter Pound
This is because the "whatness" of a thing is its form. — Metaphysician Undercover
The shape, size, colour, etc., all the descriptive terms which we use to explain what a thing is, are referring to the thing's form. All that we see, and in anyway perceive of the thing is its form. So we do see a thing's form changing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Is matter eternal in the sense that it is timeless or is matter eternal in the sense that matter has always existed in the infinite past? — Walter Pound
Isn't the "whatness" a thing's essence? — Walter Pound
then why not just say that features are all there is- the bundle theorists could explain our experience without leaving things unexplained. — Walter Pound
So Aristotle wanted a law of identity which would corroborate our observed experience.... So he posited "matter" as the underlying thing which does not change, providing for the observed temporal continuity of existence of a thing, despite the fact that the thing's form is continually changing. — Metaphysician Undercover
My reading of Aristotle. thin enough to be nearly transparent, did not cover anything so deliberate and conscious as his identifying such a problem and trying to resolve it tactically. I'm not arguing here or even asking for citation. But can you expand even a little on that part of Aristotle's thinking? I think of him as mainly an observer and secondarily a thinker about what he has observed.Aristotle's law of identity is designed to avoid this problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
Matter cannot be eternal, Aristotle demonstrates this with the cosmological argument. — Metaphysician Undercover
Suppose that you have a scientist insert 4 protons into a carbon atom, the behavior of the new atom (Ne atom) is unreactive and will not form bonds that carbon atoms would have; this new behavior is determined by other parts of matter and not by forms. — Walter Pound
you also need the laws that describe how the particles arrange themselves upon interaction. — Theorem
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