Exactly. I have ben inspired from "Magritte's pipe" a lot of years ago ... :smile:In that case, Alkis Piskas is not a person. And, as he says, Magritte's pipe is not a pipe. Nor is it La Trahison des images, The Treachery of images. — Fooloso4
I don't think that the word "treason", even figuratively used, is the right one for this case. I would rather use the word "illusion", in the sense of "perception of something objectively existing in such a way as to cause misinterpretation of its actual nature" (Merriam-Webster)So what is La Trahison des images? Nothing more than the name of a painting? — Fooloso4
Do you agree that a particular object, an individual, is a composition of matter and form, according to Aristotle? — Metaphysician Undercover
How is it that Aristotle is mortal but his active intellect is not? Well, we still read Aristotle. His intellect is at work on us. — Fooloso4
It would be quite difficult to bring the painting (tableau) itself in here, wouldn't it? — Alkis Piskas
…consciousness emerges in a specific kind of interaction: that between a rational subject and present intelligibility. — Dfpolis
The agent intellect is the mediator between a rational subject and present intelligibility. — ucarr-paraphrase
A neural network instantiates order and thus intelligibility; the agent intellect is necessary to effect comprehension of present intelligibility by the act of reading and comprehending it. This is the action of consciousness. — ucarr-paraphrase
Since consciousness does not actualize a physical possibility, it is ontologically emergent. — Dfpolis
"Each thing itself, then, and its essence are one and the same in no merely accidental way.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. But forms, as a matter of principle, are not themselves particulars. There is not a separate form for each individual. That's the 'principle of individuation' which is subject of a long-standing discussion about Aristotle's metaphysics — Wayfarer
Clearly, then, each primary and self-subsistent thing is one and the same as its essence. The sophistical objections to this position. and the question whether Socrates and to be Socrates are the same thing, are obviously answered by the same solution; for there is no difference either in the standpoint from which the question would be asked, or in that from which one could answer it successfully. We have explained, then, in what sense each thing is the same as its essence and in what sense it is not." — Metaphysics Bk 7 Ch 6 1032a
Clearly, then, each primary and self-subsistent thing is one and the same as its essence. — Metaphysics Bk 7 Ch 6 1032a
There must be a form for each and every individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
In his work On Interpretation, Aristotle maintained that the concept of "universal" is apt to be predicated of many and that singular is not. For instance, man is a universal while Callias is a singular. The philosopher distinguished highest genera like animal and species like man but he maintained that both are predicated of individual men. This was considered part of an approach to the principle of things, which adheres to the criterion that what is most universal is also most real. Consider for example a particular oak tree. This is a member of a species and it has much in common with other oak trees, past, present and future. Its universal, its oakness, is a part of it. A biologist can study oak trees and learn about oakness and more generally the intelligible order within the sensible world. Accordingly, Aristotle was more confident than Plato about coming to know the sensible world; he was a prototypical empiricist and a founder of induction. Aristotle was a new, moderate sort of realist about universals. — Wiki
:smile:But a discussion of Aristotle on phantasia would not be too difficult to bring in here. — Fooloso4
the word "phantasia" meant "the external appearance of something" and it originated from the verb "phaínō" (pronounced "faeno"), which mainly means "I show, I make appear", and which in passive voice becomes "phainomai" (pronounced "faenomae"), which mainly means "I appear (as something), I am visible*. — Alkis Piskas
Right. However, I just looked for the word "phenomenon" (singular) in the lexicon and it is not included. Τhen, Ι found out the following explanation from https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/phenomenon:Same root as 'phenomena' — Wayfarer
that's where we differ. I don't think that's what 'form' means. Socrates truly is the form 'man' but the form 'man' is common to all men. Likewise for forms generally. — Wayfarer
In his work On Interpretation, Aristotle maintained that the concept of "universal" is apt to be predicated of many and that singular is not. For instance, man is a universal while Callias is a singular. The philosopher distinguished highest genera like animal and species like man but he maintained that both are predicated of individual men. This was considered part of an approach to the principle of things, which adheres to the criterion that what is most universal is also most real. Consider for example a particular oak tree. This is a member of a species and it has much in common with other oak trees, past, present and future. Its universal, its oakness, is a part of it. A biologist can study oak trees and learn about oakness and more generally the intelligible order within the sensible world. Accordingly, Aristotle was more confident than Plato about coming to know the sensible world; he was a prototypical empiricist and a founder of induction. Aristotle was a new, moderate sort of realist about universals. — Wiki
Sorry, you need to explain yourself better, I don't see your point. — Metaphysician Undercover
The early part of "On the Heavens" is spent discussing the opinions of others. — Metaphysician Undercover
On all these grounds, therefore, we may infer with confidence that there is something beyond the bodies that are about us on this earth, different and separate from them; and that the superior glory of its nature is proportionate to its distance from this world of ours.
"Each thing itself, then, and its essence are one and the same in no merely accidental way.. — Metaphysician Undercover
The true form of the thing consists of accidents, — Metaphysician Undercover
This is why Aristotle has a primary substance (the form of the individual), and a secondary substance (the form of the species). — Metaphysician Undercover
Now of actual things some are universal, others particular (I call universal that which is by its nature predicated of a number of things, and particular that which is not ; man, for instance, is a universal, Callias a particular) .(On Interpretation, 17a38)
I also think that the mystical strain in Greek philosophy is under-explored.Of course, this is grounded in my interpretation of the mystical basis of Parmenides vision of 'to be' - Parmenides and the other early Greek sages are much nearer in spirit to the Buddhist and Hindu sages than modern philosophers generally (cf. Peter Kingsley, Thomas McEvilly). — Wayfarer
I think the way to avoid this is to stand beside Aristotle, look at what he is looking at, and try to see what he sees. This can never get us into Aristotle's mind, but it can result in seeing reality in a fresh and important way.How would your respond to the suggestion that to return to Aristotle from the vantage of the 21st century is to filter his ideas through the entire lineage of Western philosophy that came after him and transformed his concepts? — Joshs
Wayfarer — Wayfarer
I hold none of these positions. I think accidents inhere in substances, as aspects of their actuality or form. I think that potentials, such as that of an acorn to be an oak, are not self-triggering, but are triggered by something already in act.I believe dfpolis was arguing that the accidents inhere within the matter itself so that when an individual thing comes into existence (generation), the form of that thing, complete with accidents, emerges from the matter. Dfpolis referred to the example of the acorn and the oak tree. But Aristotle describes in Bk 7 why the form of the individual, complete with accidents, must be separate, and put into the thing from an external source. So what dfpolis did not properly consider is the requirement for proper environmental conditions required for the acorn to grow into an oak, as well as the external factors put into the production of the acorn. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, there's a difference between the ancient Greek word "phantasia" and its literal translation in English from modern Greek, "imagination. — Alkis Piskas
If phantasia is that according to which we say that a phantasma comes to be in us, is it a power or a condition by which we judge and are correct or incorrect? (428a)
Indeed so.The problem is even more complex since the concept of 'imagination' through the Latin imaginatio has itself undergone changes. — Fooloso4
This sounds nice to my ears, but not much deeper than that. Mainly because I don't know --actually, remember-- what Aristotle meant by "in us". Most probably, I guess, he refers to the "nous" (mind), about which he --together with Anaxagoras-- talked a lot. (But then I will have to do a good house cleaning and get a fresh insight about their thoughts and ideas by examining them in a new unit of time and in the current state of my reality. And you are offering me a good incentive to do that! :smile:)If phantasia is that according to which we say that a phantasma comes to be in us, is it a power or a condition by which we judge and are correct or incorrect? — Fooloso4
I guess so.For Aristotle too there is there is the treachery of images — Fooloso4
I would not say "mediator," as if it stood between the subject and object. Rather, it unites the subject and object, for the object informing the subject is the subject being informed by the object. In the sentence you quote, I was discussing emergence -- trying to complete an analogy between properties like charge, which cannot be observed in isolation, and the agent intellect, which is only experienced when we become aware of something intelligible.…consciousness emerges in a specific kind of interaction: that between a rational subject and present intelligibility. — Dfpolis
The agent intellect is the mediator between a rational subject and present intelligibility. — ucarr-paraphrase — ucarr
This is a reasonable paraphrase. I would add that this order instantiates the intelligibility of a sensed object because it is the sensed object acting on our neural net. So, it is not "other" than the object, but a form of shared existence -- the object's action and our representation.A neural network instantiates order and thus intelligibility; the agent intellect is necessary to effect comprehension of present intelligibility by the act of reading and comprehending it. This is the action of consciousness. — ucarr-paraphrase
I would not say it is a matter of degrees of organization. The same organization of the neural net is the vehicle of intelligibility we are not aware of it, and the vehicle of understood content when we are aware of it. "The vehicle of" is awkward, but I want to distinguish between the net's intrinsic intelligibility as a neural structure, and the intelligible information it encodes, which is what we understand.A neural network is first-order organization whereas consciousness is second-order organization? — ucarr
Aristotle does not divide things as we do. His "matter" (hyle) is not our "stuff," and his concept of the physical is that it is changeable being, i.e. being that has the potential to be something else. Once we come to understand intelligibility, that understanding cannot change. We can add to it. We can deny it. Still, it, itself, is just what it is and can never be something else. So, it is immutable and non-physical.Since consciousness is an interweave of the physical and the inter-relational, consciousness is, ontologically speaking, a hybrid of the two under rubric of Aristotelianism? — ucarr
Aristotle is not very concerned with the issue of personal identity. It became an issue for Christians, especially given the doctrine of resurrection of the body (not the soul!). (That, the hypostatic union, and the Trinity lead Christian theologians to elaborate a theory of person as a rational subject of attribution).Is the agent intellect a synonym of the self; does the agent intellect possess matter and form? — ucarr
I think it is all quite clear. The formal cause is by nature. It is at work. Your claim is that it is a concept. — Fooloso4
The discussion in Book 1, part 2 is not a discussion of the opinions of others. It concludes:
On all these grounds, therefore, we may infer with confidence that there is something beyond the bodies that are about us on this earth, different and separate from them; and that the superior glory of its nature is proportionate to its distance from this world of ours. — Fooloso4
"Each thing itself, then, and its essence are one and the same in no merely accidental way..
— Metaphysician Undercover
First, this contradicts your earlier claim:
The true form of the thing consists of accidents,
— Metaphysician Undercover
Second, the term 'essence' means 'what it is to be'. It is a Latin term that was invented to translate the Greek 'ousia'. So, yes, what each thing is and what it is to be that thing are one and the same.
This is why Aristotle has a primary substance (the form of the individual), and a secondary substance (the form of the species).
— Metaphysician Undercover
The primary ousia (substance) is not a form. A primary substance is a particular thing, both form and matter. To be Socrates is not to be a form. The secondary substance is not a form either, it is a universal, what all men have in common that distinguishes them from all else. — Fooloso4
What is true of Callias is not true of all men, but what is true of all men is true of Callias. What all men have in common is not a universal. What all men have in common is a form. It is because of the form that there is the universal. — Fooloso4
I hold none of these positions. I think accidents inhere in substances, as aspects of their actuality or form. I think that potentials, such as that of an acorn to be an oak, are not self-triggering, but are triggered by something already in act. — Dfpolis
As I keep saying, there's much more wisdom in ancient Greek philosophopy than what we can remember in our times, after all the changes in and the evolution of the human thought. — Alkis Piskas
I'm not sure I get this right. Can you expand it a little?In my opinion, the wisdom of Socratic philosophy has to do with the articulation of problems that defy solution. — Fooloso4
Yes. Still, we can abstract aspects that are common to a species or genus, and these aspects are grounded in the form of the species or genus members.This necessitates that there is a form unique to each an every individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
From the standpoint that Socrates is a distinct and different individual from Calias, it is necessary to answer that the difference between the two is a difference of form. — Metaphysician Undercover
But formal cause cannot account for the accidents. — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore the cause of the individual, natural thing's form, must be peculiar and unique to the individual itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
But chance and spontaneity are also reckoned among causes: many things are said both to be and to come to be as a result of chance and spontaneity. (Physics, 195b)
What is beyond the bodies is properly immaterial — Metaphysician Undercover
something beyond the bodies that are about us on this earth, — Fooloso4
These premises clearly give the conclusion that there is in nature some bodily substance other than the formations we know, prior to them all and more divine than they. (On the Heavens Book 1, part 2)
Read Metaphysics Bk7 please. Substance is form. — Metaphysician Undercover
By way of the usual translations, the central argument of the Metaphysics would be: being qua being is being per se in accordance with the categories, which in turn is primarily substance, but primary substance is form, while form is essence and essence is actuality. You might react to such verbiage in various ways. You might think, I am too ignorant and untrained to understand these things, and need an expert to explain them to me. Or you might think, Aristotle wrote gibberish. But if you have some acquaintance with the classical languages, you might begin to be suspicious that something has gone awry: Aristotle wrote Greek, didn't he? And while this argument doesn't sound much like English, it doesn't sound like Greek either, does it? In fact this argument appears to be written mostly in an odd sort of Latin, dressed up to look like English. Why do we need Latin to translate Greek into English at all? (https://www.greenlion.com/PDFs/Sachs_intro.pdf)
Independent from human universals, each form is the form of an individual. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since form is the principle of intelligibility, each and every difference which is apprehended by a human being, as a difference, must be a difference of form. If it was not a difference of form, we would not perceive it as a difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
In my opinion, the wisdom of Socratic philosophy has to do with the articulation of problems that defy solution.
— Fooloso4
I'm not sure I get this right. Can you expand it a little? — Alkis Piskas
All men naturally desire knowledge.
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