Aristotle does not say that animals, plants, and the cosmos have purposes but that the are purposes, ends-in-themselves ... Aristotle's "teleology" is nothing but his claim that all natural beings are self-maintaining wholes.
The form of a thing is its nature ... — Bob Ross
In one sense, nature means the coming into being of things that are born.
(i.e., its essence — Bob Ross
A "devil species" is bad, no matter how good it is at being bad. In fact, the better it is at being bad, the less good is.
The good of a thing cannot be determined apart from what it is to be that thing, apart from its telos
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We are back again to the absurd notion that a natural thing's telos, its place is the cosmos is to harm other species. Such a cosmos would not be a well-ordered whole.
Aristotle points out that there are various meanings of good. The NE begins by saying that all things aim at some good.
Form (eidos) and nature (phusis) are not two terms with the same meaning. In Book V, chapter IV, of the Metaphysics he says:
In one sense, nature means the coming into being of things that are born.
Nature encompasses both form (eidos) and matter (hule).
'Essence' is an English translation of the Latin 'essentia'. A term coined by Cicero to translate 'ousia'. Literally it is the “the what it was to be” of a thing.
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Its form is what it is to be what it is.
Whether or not such a species would fit well into the “ordered whole” of nature is irrelevant — Bob Ross
Since Aristotle is attaching the 'goodness' or 'badness' of a thing relative to its nature, — Bob Ross
You are accepting Aristotle’s concept of ‘goodness’ (as underlined) and then turning around and irrelevantly commenting that it is absurd for such a species to exist as a coherent member of nature—that doesn’t address the hypothetical I have presented. — Bob Ross
You would have to demonstrate how the hypothetical (stated above) is inconsistent or incoherent with Aristotle’s concept of ‘good’. — Bob Ross
I understand the point is that Aristotle thinks that the telos of each species is well-ordered, but I think it doesn’t help his case because of how he defined goodness. — Bob Ross
Aristotle points out that there are various meanings of good. — Fooloso4
Form is the idea of the essence of a thing
the form of a human being is the essence of a human being. — Bob Ross
If I take your argument seriously (that a human being’s form is fully realized immediately) ... — Bob Ross
You are just going around in circles, trying to distinguish these terms when they are clearly the same. — Bob Ross
You are sidestepping the hypothetical. It is akin to if I asked you "if you had $1,000,000,000,000,000, then what would you buy?" — Bob Ross
First, Aristotle claims that it is not correct from a biological point of view to divide animals into the categories of "tame" and " wild " as some before him have done:
"For in a manner of speaking everything that is tame is also wild, e.g. human beings, horses, cattle . . . ." [PA 643b4]
For each of these kinds of animal, some members are tame while others are wild and even those that are tame do not start out that way. Unless they are tamed by human beings, all animals remain in their wild condition—and even human beings are born wild. In a surprisingly little noticed passage in the History of Animals, Aristotle says that:
" in children, though one can see as it were traces and seeds of the dispositions that they will have later, yet their soul at this period has practically no difference from that of wild animals. " [HA 588a-588]
Of course it is education that will shape those beginning dispositions and provide the char-
acter and characteristics that children will have later in life, and Aristotle believes that it is the job of politics and the city through laws and training to provide that education. — Aesop, Aristotle, and Animals: The Role of Fables in Human Life, Edward Clayton
These people, however, merely undertake to say what sort of thing the soul is, but about the sort of body that is receptive of it they determine nothing further, as if it were possible, as in the Pythagorean stories, for any random soul to be inserted into any random body, whereas it seems that in fact each body has its own special form and shape.96 But what they say is somewhat like saying that the craft of carpentry could be inserted into flutes, whereas in fact the craft must use its instruments, and the soul its body. — Aristotle, De Anima, 407b20, translated by C.D.C. Reeve
Suppose someone invents a knife.
The whole is intelligibly prior to the part.
The hypothetical you propose suggests "natures" can be arbitrarily injected into life forms. Aristotle rejected that possibility in De Anima:
The need for nurture to become what is our 'special' nature is integral to our place between the beast and the divine.
The problem with your example is that a knife has more than the function of cutting ... — Bob Ross
Now, it does not become a ‘bad’ or lesser ‘good’ X because one cannot grab it; because we stipulated its sole function is cutting. — Bob Ross
It seems like you are denying that what is good is for a thing to fulfill its nature and instead it is for a thing to fulfill its nature if it is a proper part of the whole. — Bob Ross
This doesn’t seem accurate to me; because then a thing could be bad which is fulfilling its nature. — Bob Ross
It is asking how something bad is good. — Fooloso4
A "devil species" is bad, no matter how good it is at being bad. In fact, the better it is at being bad, the less good is. — Fooloso4
Moreover, the relation of a thing to a bigger whole isn’t necessarily an aspect of its nature: is a part of a rabbit’s nature to get eaten by a fox? — Bob Ross
Now you are catching on! Just as a knife has more than one function, a natural species does as well.
There is a difference between something that is in a species' nature and what that nature is.
Any species that has a mind, has more than one function. At a minimum, it has the function of thinking, or reasoning. An intelligent species that is not intelligent is a contradiction.
That a species is a proper part of the whole is essential for understanding what a species is, that is, for understanding its nature. It is not as if these are two separate things - its nature apart from nature and its nature as part of nature. We can, when discussing such things, make a distinction, but the distinction does not exist in the nature of things.
What it is to be a fox or rabbit is not to eat or be eaten by the other.
How does an essence come into being in the language of Aristotle?
I am analyzing the ‘goodness’ of such a species within the context of their species qua whole and not nature qua whole. — Bob Ross
You have to demonstrate why I should think of it in terms of nature and not the species — Bob Ross
...for me, both are capable of separate analysis since ‘goodness’ is relativistic. — Bob Ross
Every art and every inquiry, and similarly every action and pursuit, is thought to aim at some good; and for this reason the good has rightly been declared to be that at which all things aim.
Firstly, how does this negate the ‘devils species’? — Bob Ross
The problem with your example is that a knife has more than the function of cutting — Bob Ross
It is a hypothetical meant to tease out the consistent conclusion of Aristotle’s concept of ‘good’: you are trying to migrate it to actuality or practicality. — Bob Ross
I am having a hard time fathoming how Aristotle is avoiding this glaring issue, — Bob Ross
They are completely separable: I can analyze the function of a liver in isolation to how the body, as a whole, works. — Bob Ross
...if I take your argument seriously, then you would have to go further and analyze everything in terms of the largest context—which would be the good of reality (whatever that may be). — Bob Ross
(982a)We consider first, then, that the wise man knows all things, so far as it is possible, without having knowledge of every one of them individually …
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