Where I am from, using wiki to debate philosophy would get you laughed out of the room. — Jackson
Could you say that Aristotle's later theory of essence and substance is foreshadowed here? — Wayfarer
The Latin is wrong. By "essence" Aristotle means "form" or "shape." (eidos or morphê) — Jackson
Aristotle did not use the term 'essence'. It is an English translation of the Latin 'essentia'. A term coined by Cicero to translate 'ousia'. Ousia, the term used by Aristotle, does not mean eidos or morphê. They are three different terms that have some overlap but have different meanings. — Fooloso4
No, in the Physics, formal cause is "eidos" or "morphe". You are wrong that it is ousia. — Jackson
Ousia just means being or a thing. — Jackson
In the long history since those terms were used to translate 'ousia' they have gained various meanings that should not be attributed to Aristotle.
— Fooloso4
I believe you are just wrong. — Jackson
I must be missing the point. — Jackson
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