the forms that matter takes must (since both accounts posit a divine intellect) have existed prior to - and so also be separate from - their instantiations. — AJJ
Because the forms exist within the divine intellect, which is eternal. From what I understand this is the case with both Platonism and Aristotelianism, but there might be an important distinction I’m not aware of. — AJJ
Not to be at all confused in any way with in any sense any kind of Christian "divine intellect." And not nature either. Maybe a word or two from them on just what they meant by "divine intellect." Or citation would do.There are Platonic and Aristotelian arguments for the divine intellect — AJJ
Given the existence of an intellect independent of the world (a position common to all Aristotelians and Platonists), this intellect must have itself as the object of its thinking. The point had already been made by Aristotle (Metaphysics, 12. 9)... Plotinus separates himself however from Aristotle when he claims that this self-thought in divine intellect is a thinking of the Forms.
Ok. Until and unless you offer the Greek term for our consideration, we must understand that by "divine" you do not mean divine.I don’t think the word is actually important to what I’m asking. “Intellect independent of the world” is what I mean by “divine intellect”. — AJJ
Aristotle and forms and matter is a not-simple subject. Dfpolis and MU and some others have batted it about in detail. Maybe search this site.material objects be manifestations of Plato’s Forms, while also having form as an essential metaphysical component as conceived by Aristotle? — AJJ
And I am pretty sure that this is exactly not Aristotle's view. And what that amounts to is that if you want to talk about Aristotle and Plato you shall have to first go through a kind of cleansing process such that you will not afterwords reflexively and automatically reinterpret their thinking through your understanding, but rather at first simply try to understand their thinking by itself.my considerations being that in material objects matter and form are inseparable, — AJJ
Ok. Until and unless you offer the Greek term for our consideration, we must understand that by "divine" you do not mean divine. — tim wood
There are lots of problems with this - and I'm sure they've been exhaustively covered over 2,000+ years. What is the accepted wisdom on this out-of-the-world intellect? — tim wood
my considerations being that in material objects matter and form are inseparable,
— AJJ
And I am pretty sure that this is exactly not Aristotle's view. — tim wood
Perhaps slightly better known to modern readers is a related Aristotelian doctrine to the effect that the ordinary objects of our experience are composites of form and matter
This is from Edward Feser’s book on Aquinas (emphasis mine):
Perhaps slightly better known to modern readers is a related Aristotelian doctrine to the effect that the ordinary objects of our experience are composites of form and matter — AJJ
1) Are Forms and forms thought to be incompatible? 2) Can’t material objects be manifestations of Plato’s Forms, while also having form as an essential metaphysical component as conceived by Aristotle? — AJJ
And you've been delivered to the entrance to a rabbit-hole. I submit to you that what matter is, to Aristotle, is no simple question. — tim wood
I take these are your questions:
1) Are Forms and forms thought to be incompatible? 2) Can’t material objects be manifestations of Plato’s Forms, while also having form as an essential metaphysical component as conceived by Aristotle?
— AJJ
1) By whom? As in some applications - those in use here - they are terms of art. The the question then is unanswerable until and unless the terms are understood. But a hint and a clue suggests that as different terms, they mean different things, and as different things should be at least at first supposed incompatible. — tim wood
2) You can if you want. The question becomes, how much violence you do to both to establish between them a mediating equals sign? — tim wood
The quote refers to material objects, not matter per se. Material objects is what I’m referring to as well. — AJJ
So to answer the question someone could enlighten me to certain definitions that make the two views in contention incompatible.
An explanation of any detrimental changes you’d have to make to reconcile them would be an interesting answer also.
Hard to have material objects absent matter. Oh, wait - that's part of the problem! — tim wood
– Alfarabi, Harmonization (unpublished translation by Miriam Galston,Whoever inquires into Aristotle’s sciences, peruses his books, and takes pains with them will not miss the many modes of concealment, blinding and complicating in his approach, despite his apparent intention to explain and clarify.
Philoponus (490-570), a Christian and largely a critic of neo-Platonism, seems in essential agreement with all of the preceding commentators:
“Now, [Aristotle] practiced obscurity on account of his readers, so as to make those who were naturally suited eager to hear the argument, but to turn those who were uninterested away right from the beginning. For the genuine listeners, to the degree that the arguments are obscure, by so much are they eager to struggle and to arrive at the depth.”
The doctrine doesn’t refer to matter per se; it refers to material objects, of which matter is a component along with form. — AJJ
Are Forms and forms thought to be incompatible? — AJJ
Then allow me to ask you, since you seem to know. What, in Aristotle, is matter? If a "component" is difficult to know, then so will be what it's a component of. We can leave this, if you like. I'm only on about the difficulty of the concepts, which neither the questions nor the references - except the Stanford.edu, - hint at. — tim wood
“since all cognition and every definition are through form, it follows that prime matter can be known or defined, not of itself, but through the composite” (DPN 2.14). The notion of prime matter is just the notion of something in pure potentiality with respect to having any kind of form, and thus with respect to being any kind of thing at all. And as noted above, what is purely potential has no actuality at all, and thus does not exist at all.
Are Forms and forms thought to be incompatible?
— AJJ
I think Aquinas demonstrated that the two conceptions are compatible. — Metaphysician Undercover
This was discussed in Dfpolis’s thread on realism, and Feser talks of it in his book (matter per se is termed “prime matter”): — AJJ
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