Bibliographic Information

On Aristotle Posterior analytics 2

Philoponus(?) ; translated by Owen Goldin

(Ancient commentators on Aristotle)

Duckworth, 2009

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Philoponus(?) on Aristotle Posterior analytics 2

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Note

Translated from the Ancient Greek

Includes bibliographical references (p. [189]-192) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The "Posterior Analytics" contains Aristotle's Philosophy of Science. In Book 2, Aristotle asks how the scientist discovers what sort of loss of light constitutes lunar eclipse. The scientist has to discover that the moon's darkening is due to the earth's shadow. Once that defining explanation is known the scientist possesses the full scientific concept of lunar eclipse and can use it to explain other necessary features of the phenomenon. The present commentary, arguably misascribed to Philoponus, offers some interpretations of Aristotle that are unfamiliar nowadays. For example, the scientific concept of a human is acquired from observing particular humans and repeatedly receiving impressions in the sense image or percept and later in the imagination. The impressions received are not only of particular distinctive characteristics, like paleness, but also of universal human characteristics, like rationality. Perception can thus in a sense apprehend universal qualities in the individual as well as particular ones.

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