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Aristotelian physics

Aristotelian physics is the form of natural science or natural philosophy described in the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384–322 BC). In his work Physics, Aristotle intended to establish general principles of change that govern all natural bodies, both living and inanimate, celestial and terrestrial – including all motion (change with respect to place), quantitative change (change with respect to size or number), qualitative change, and substantial change ("coming to be" [coming into existence, 'generation'] or "passing away" [no longer existing, 'corruption']). To Aristotle, 'physics' was a broad field that included subjects that would now be called the philosophy of mind, sensory experience, memory, anatomy and biology. It constitutes the foundation of the thought underlying many of his works.

Key concepts of Aristotelian physics include the structuring of the cosmos into concentric spheres, with the Earth at the centre and celestial spheres around it. The terrestrial sphere was made of four elements, namely earth, air, fire, and water, subject to change and decay. The celestial spheres were made of a fifth element, an unchangeable aether. Objects made of these elements have natural motions: those of earth and water tend to fall; those of air and fire, to rise. The speed of such motion depends on their weights and the density of the medium. Aristotle argued that a vacuum could not exist as speeds would become infinite.

Aristotle described four causes or explanations of change as seen on earth: the material, formal, efficient, and final causes of things. As regards living things, Aristotle's biology relied on observation of natural kinds, both the basic kinds and the groups to which these belonged. He did not conduct experiments in the modern sense, but relied on amassing data, observational procedures such as dissection, and making hypotheses about relationships between measurable quantities such as body size and lifespan.

Methods edit

 
A page from an 1837 edition of the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle's Physica, a book addressing a variety of subjects including the philosophy of nature and topics now part of its modern-day namesake: physics.

nature is everywhere the cause of order.[1]

— Aristotle, Physics VIII.1

While consistent with common human experience, Aristotle's principles were not based on controlled, quantitative experiments, so they do not describe our universe in the precise, quantitative way now expected of science. Contemporaries of Aristotle like Aristarchus rejected these principles in favor of heliocentrism, but their ideas were not widely accepted. Aristotle's principles were difficult to disprove merely through casual everyday observation, but later development of the scientific method challenged his views with experiments and careful measurement, using increasingly advanced technology such as the telescope and vacuum pump.

In claiming novelty for their doctrines, those natural philosophers who developed the "new science" of the seventeenth century frequently contrasted "Aristotelian" physics with their own. Physics of the former sort, so they claimed, emphasized the qualitative at the expense of the quantitative, neglected mathematics and its proper role in physics (particularly in the analysis of local motion), and relied on such suspect explanatory principles as final causes and "occult" essences. Yet in his Physics Aristotle characterizes physics or the "science of nature" as pertaining to magnitudes (megethê), motion (or "process" or "gradual change" – kinêsis), and time (chronon) (Phys III.4 202b30–1). Indeed, the Physics is largely concerned with an analysis of motion, particularly local motion, and the other concepts that Aristotle believes are requisite to that analysis.[2]

— Michael J. White, "Aristotle on the Infinite, Space, and Time" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle

There are clear differences between modern and Aristotelian physics, the main being the use of mathematics, largely absent in Aristotle. Some recent studies, however, have re-evaluated Aristotle's physics, stressing both its empirical validity and its continuity with modern physics.[3]

Concepts edit

 
Peter Apian's 1524 representation of the universe, heavily influenced by Aristotle's ideas. The terrestrial spheres of water and earth (shown in the form of continents and oceans) are at the center of the universe, immediately surrounded by the spheres of air, and then fire, where meteorites and comets were believed to originate. The surrounding celestial spheres from inner to outer are those of the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Sun, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, each indicated by a planet symbol. The eighth sphere is the firmament of fixed stars, which include the visible constellations. The precession of the equinoxes caused a gap between the visible and notional divisions of the zodiac, so medieval Christian astronomers created a ninth sphere, the Crystallinum which holds an unchanging version of the zodiac.[4][5] The tenth sphere is that of the divine prime mover proposed by Aristotle (though each sphere would have an unmoved mover). Above that, Christian theology placed the "Empire of God".
What this diagram does not show is how Aristotle explained the complicated curves that the planets make in the sky. To preserve the principle of perfect circular motion, he proposed that each planet was moved by several nested spheres, with the poles of each connected to the next outermost, but with axes of rotation offset from each other. Though Aristotle left the number of spheres open to empirical determination, he proposed adding to the many-sphere models of previous astronomers, resulting in a total of 44 or 55 celestial spheres.

Elements and spheres edit

Aristotle divided his universe into "terrestrial spheres" which were "corruptible" and where humans lived, and moving but otherwise unchanging celestial spheres.

Aristotle believed that four classical elements make up everything in the terrestrial spheres:[6] earth, air, fire and water.[a][7] He also held that the heavens are made of a special weightless and incorruptible (i.e. unchangeable) fifth element called "aether".[7] Aether also has the name "quintessence", meaning, literally, "fifth being".[8]

Aristotle considered heavy matter such as iron and other metals to consist primarily of the element earth, with a smaller amount of the other three terrestrial elements. Other, lighter objects, he believed, have less earth, relative to the other three elements in their composition.[8]

The four classical elements were not invented by Aristotle; they were originated by Empedocles. During the Scientific Revolution, the ancient theory of classical elements was found to be incorrect, and was replaced by the empirically tested concept of chemical elements.

Celestial spheres edit

According to Aristotle, the Sun, Moon, planets and stars – are embedded in perfectly concentric "crystal spheres" that rotate eternally at fixed rates. Because the celestial spheres are incapable of any change except rotation, the terrestrial sphere of fire must account for the heat, starlight and occasional meteorites.[9] The lowest, lunar sphere is the only celestial sphere that actually comes in contact with the sublunary orb's changeable, terrestrial matter, dragging the rarefied fire and air along underneath as it rotates.[10] Like Homer's æthere (αἰθήρ) – the "pure air" of Mount Olympus – was the divine counterpart of the air breathed by mortal beings (άήρ, aer). The celestial spheres are composed of the special element aether, eternal and unchanging, the sole capability of which is a uniform circular motion at a given rate (relative to the diurnal motion of the outermost sphere of fixed stars).

The concentric, aetherial, cheek-by-jowl "crystal spheres" that carry the Sun, Moon and stars move eternally with unchanging circular motion. Spheres are embedded within spheres to account for the "wandering stars" (i.e. the planets, which, in comparison with the Sun, Moon and stars, appear to move erratically). Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn are the only planets (including minor planets) which were visible before the invention of the telescope, which is why Neptune and Uranus are not included, nor are any asteroids. Later, the belief that all spheres are concentric was forsaken in favor of Ptolemy's deferent and epicycle model. Aristotle submits to the calculations of astronomers regarding the total number of spheres and various accounts give a number in the neighborhood of fifty spheres. An unmoved mover is assumed for each sphere, including a "prime mover" for the sphere of fixed stars. The unmoved movers do not push the spheres (nor could they, being immaterial and dimensionless) but are the final cause of the spheres' motion, i.e. they explain it in a way that's similar to the explanation "the soul is moved by beauty".

Terrestrial change edit

 
The four terrestrial elements

Unlike the eternal and unchanging celestial aether, each of the four terrestrial elements are capable of changing into either of the two elements they share a property with: e.g. the cold and wet (water) can transform into the hot and wet (air) or the cold and dry (earth). Any apparent change from cold and wet into the hot and dry (fire) is actually a two-step process, as first one of the property changes, then the other. These properties are predicated of an actual substance relative to the work it is able to do; that of heating or chilling and of desiccating or moistening. The four elements exist only with regard to this capacity and relative to some potential work. The celestial element is eternal and unchanging, so only the four terrestrial elements account for "coming to be" and "passing away" – or, in the terms of Aristotle's On Generation and Corruption (Περὶ γενέσεως καὶ φθορᾶς), "generation" and "corruption".

Natural place edit

The Aristotelian explanation of gravity is that all bodies move toward their natural place. For the elements earth and water, that place is the center of the (geocentric) universe;[11] the natural place of water is a concentric shell around the Earth because earth is heavier; it sinks in water. The natural place of air is likewise a concentric shell surrounding that of water; bubbles rise in water. Finally, the natural place of fire is higher than that of air but below the innermost celestial sphere (carrying the Moon).

In Book Delta of his Physics (IV.5), Aristotle defines topos (place) in terms of two bodies, one of which contains the other: a "place" is where the inner surface of the former (the containing body) touches the outer surface of the other (the contained body). This definition remained dominant until the beginning of the 17th century, even though it had been questioned and debated by philosophers since antiquity.[12] The most significant early critique was made in terms of geometry by the 11th-century Arab polymath al-Hasan Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen) in his Discourse on Place.[13]

Natural motion edit

Terrestrial objects rise or fall, to a greater or lesser extent, according to the ratio of the four elements of which they are composed. For example, earth, the heaviest element, and water, fall toward the center of the cosmos; hence the Earth and for the most part its oceans, will have already come to rest there. At the opposite extreme, the lightest elements, air and especially fire, rise up and away from the center.[14]

The elements are not proper substances in Aristotelian theory (or the modern sense of the word). Instead, they are abstractions used to explain the varying natures and behaviors of actual materials in terms of ratios between them.

Motion and change are closely related in Aristotelian physics. Motion, according to Aristotle, involved a change from potentiality to actuality.[15] He gave example of four types of change, namely change in substance, in quality, in quantity and in place.[15]

 
Aristotle's laws of motion. In Physics he states that objects fall at a speed proportional to their weight and inversely proportional to the density of the fluid they are immersed in. This is a correct approximation for objects in Earth's gravitational field moving in air or water.[3]

Aristotle proposed that the speed at which two identically shaped objects sink or fall is directly proportional to their weights and inversely proportional to the density of the medium through which they move.[16] While describing their terminal velocity, Aristotle must stipulate that there would be no limit at which to compare the speed of atoms falling through a vacuum, (they could move indefinitely fast because there would be no particular place for them to come to rest in the void). Now however it is understood that at any time prior to achieving terminal velocity in a relatively resistance-free medium like air, two such objects are expected to have nearly identical speeds because both are experiencing a force of gravity proportional to their masses and have thus been accelerating at nearly the same rate. This became especially apparent from the eighteenth century when partial vacuum experiments began to be made, but some two hundred years earlier Galileo had already demonstrated that objects of different weights reach the ground in similar times.[17]

Unnatural motion edit

Apart from the natural tendency of terrestrial exhalations to rise and objects to fall, unnatural or forced motion from side to side results from the turbulent collision and sliding of the objects as well as transmutation between the elements (On Generation and Corruption).

Chance edit

In his Physics Aristotle examines accidents (συμβεβηκός, symbebekòs) that have no cause but chance. "Nor is there any definite cause for an accident, but only chance (τύχη, týche), namely an indefinite (ἀόριστον, aóriston) cause" (Metaphysics V, 1025a25).

It is obvious that there are principles and causes which are generable and destructible apart from the actual processes of generation and destruction; for if this is not true, everything will be of necessity: that is, if there must necessarily be some cause, other than accidental, of that which is generated and destroyed. Will this be, or not? Yes, if this happens; otherwise not (Metaphysics VI, 1027a29).

Continuum and vacuum edit

Aristotle argues against the indivisibles of Democritus (which differ considerably from the historical and the modern use of the term "atom"). As a place without anything existing at or within it, Aristotle argued against the possibility of a vacuum or void. Because he believed that the speed of an object's motion is proportional to the force being applied (or, in the case of natural motion, the object's weight) and inversely proportional to the density of the medium, he reasoned that objects moving in a void would move indefinitely fast – and thus any and all objects surrounding the void would immediately fill it. The void, therefore, could never form.[18]

The "voids" of modern-day astronomy (such as the Local Void adjacent to our own galaxy) have the opposite effect: ultimately, bodies off-center are ejected from the void due to the gravity of the material outside.[19]

Four causes edit

According to Aristotle, there are four ways to explain the aitia or causes of change. He writes that "we do not have knowledge of a thing until we have grasped its why, that is to say, its cause."[20][21]

Aristotle held that there were four kinds of causes.[21][22]

Material edit

The material cause of a thing is that of which it is made. For a table, that might be wood; for a statue, that might be bronze or marble.

"In one way we say that the aition is that out of which. as existing, something comes to be, like the bronze for the statue, the silver for the phial, and their genera" (194b2 3—6). By "genera", Aristotle means more general ways of classifying the matter (e.g. "metal"; "material"); and that will become important. A little later on. he broadens the range of the material cause to include letters (of syllables), fire and the other elements (of physical bodies), parts (of wholes), and even premisses (of conclusions: Aristotle re-iterates this claim, in slightly different terms, in An. Post II. 11).[23]

— R.J. Hankinson, "The Theory of the Physics" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle

Formal edit

The formal cause of a thing is the essential property that makes it the kind of thing it is. In Metaphysics Book Α Aristotle emphasizes that form is closely related to essence and definition. He says for example that the ratio 2:1, and number in general, is the cause of the octave.

"Another [cause] is the form and the exemplar: this is the formula (logos) of the essence (to ti en einai), and its genera, for instance the ratio 2:1 of the octave" (Phys 11.3 194b26—8)... Form is not just shape... We are asking (and this is the connection with essence, particularly in its canonical Aristotelian formulation) what it is to be some thing. And it is a feature of musical harmonics (first noted and wondered at by the Pythagoreans) that intervals of this type do indeed exhibit this ratio in some form in the instruments used to create them (the length of pipes, of strings, etc.). In some sense, the ratio explains what all the intervals have in common, why they turn out the same.[24]

— R.J. Hankinson, "Cause" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle

Efficient edit

The efficient cause of a thing is the primary agency by which its matter took its form. For example, the efficient cause of a baby is a parent of the same species and that of a table is a carpenter, who knows the form of the table. In his Physics II, 194b29—32, Aristotle writes: "there is that which is the primary originator of the change and of its cessation, such as the deliberator who is responsible [sc. for the action] and the father of the child, and in general the producer of the thing produced and the changer of the thing changed".

Aristotle’s examples here are instructive: one case of mental and one of physical causation, followed by a perfectly general characterization. But they conceal (or at any rate fail to make patent) a crucial feature of Aristotle’s concept of efficient causation, and one which serves to distinguish it from most modern homonyms. For Aristotle, any process requires a constantly operative efficient cause as long as it continues. This commitment appears most starkly to modern eyes in Aristotle’s discussion of projectile motion: what keeps the projectile moving after it leaves the hand? "Impetus", "momentum", much less "inertia", are not possible answers. There must be a mover, distinct (at least in some sense) from the thing moved, which is exercising its motive capacity at every moment of the projectile’s flight (see Phys VIII. 10 266b29—267a11). Similarly, in every case of animal generation, there is always some thing responsible for the continuity of that generation, although it may do so by way of some intervening instrument (Phys II.3 194b35—195a3).[24]

— R.J. Hankinson, "Causes" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle

Final edit

The final cause is that for the sake of which something takes place, its aim or teleological purpose: for a germinating seed, it is the adult plant,[25] for a ball at the top of a ramp, it is coming to rest at the bottom, for an eye, it is seeing, for a knife, it is cutting.

Goals have an explanatory function: that is a commonplace, at least in the context of action-ascriptions. Less of a commonplace is the view espoused by Aristotle, that finality and purpose are to be found throughout nature, which is for him the realm of those things which contain within themselves principles of movement and rest (i.e. efficient causes); thus it makes sense to attribute purposes not only to natural things themselves, but also to their parts: the parts of a natural whole exist for the sake of the whole. As Aristotle himself notes, "for the sake of" locutions are ambiguous: "A is for the sake of B" may mean that A exists or is undertaken in order to bring B about; or it may mean that A is for B’s benefit (An II.4 415b2—3, 20—1); but both types of finality have, he thinks, a crucial role to play in natural, as well as deliberative, contexts. Thus a man may exercise for the sake of his health: and so "health", and not just the hope of achieving it, is the cause of his action (this distinction is not trivial). But the eyelids are for the sake of the eye (to protect it: PA II.1 3) and the eye for the sake of the animal as a whole (to help it function properly: cf. An II.7).[26]

— R.J. Hankinson, "Causes" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle

Biology edit

According to Aristotle, the science of living things proceeds by gathering observations about each natural kind of animal, organizing them into genera and species (the differentiae in History of Animals) and then going on to study the causes (in Parts of Animals and Generation of Animals, his three main biological works).[27]

The four causes of animal generation can be summarized as follows. The mother and father represent the material and efficient causes, respectively. The mother provides the matter out of which the embryo is formed, while the father provides the agency that informs that material and triggers its development. The formal cause is the definition of the animal’s substantial being (GA I.1 715a4: ho logos tês ousias). The final cause is the adult form, which is the end for the sake of which development takes place.[27]

— Devin M. Henry, "Generation of Animals" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle

Organism and mechanism edit

The four elements make up the uniform materials such as blood, flesh and bone, which are themselves the matter out of which are created the non-uniform organs of the body (e.g. the heart, liver and hands) "which in turn, as parts, are matter for the functioning body as a whole (PA II. 1 646a 13—24)".[23]

[There] is a certain obvious conceptual economy about the view that in natural processes naturally constituted things simply seek to realize in full actuality the potentials contained within them (indeed, this is what is for them to be natural); on the other hand, as the detractors of Aristotelianism from the seventeenth century on were not slow to point out, this economy is won at the expense of any serious empirical content. Mechanism, at least as practiced by Aristotle’s contemporaries and predecessors, may have been explanatorily inadequate – but at least it was an attempt at a general account given in reductive terms of the lawlike connections between things. Simply introducing what later reductionists were to scoff at as "occult qualities" does not explain – it merely, in the manner of Molière’s famous satirical joke, serves to re-describe the effect. Formal talk, or so it is said, is vacuous.

Things are not however quite as bleak as this. For one thing, there’s no point in trying to engage in reductionist science if you don’t have the wherewithal, empirical and conceptual, to do so successfully: science shouldn't be simply unsubstantiated speculative metaphysics. But more than that, there is a point to describing the world in such teleologically loaded terms: it makes sense of things in a way that atomist speculations do not. And further, Aristotle’s talk of species-forms is not as empty as his opponents would insinuate. He doesn't simply say that things do what they do because that's the sort of thing they do: the whole point of his classificatory biology, most clearly exemplified in PA, is to show what sorts of function go with what, which presuppose which and which are subservient to which. And in this sense, formal or functional biology is susceptible of a type of reductionism. We start, he tells us, with the basic animal kinds which we all pre-theoretically (although not indefeasibly) recognize (cf. PA I.4): but we then go on to show how their parts relate to one another: why it is, for instance, that only blooded creatures have lungs, and how certain structures in one species are analogous or homologous to those in another (such as scales in fish, feathers in birds, hair in mammals). And the answers, for Aristotle, are to be found in the economy of functions, and how they all contribute to the overall well-being (the final cause in this sense) of the animal.[28]

— R.J. Hankinson, "The Relations between the Causes" in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle
See also Organic form.

Psychology edit

According to Aristotle, perception and thought are similar, though not exactly alike in that perception is concerned only with the external objects that are acting on our sense organs at any given time, whereas we can think about anything we choose. Thought is about universal forms, in so far as they have been successfully understood, based on our memory of having encountered instances of those forms directly.[29]

Aristotle’s theory of cognition rests on two central pillars: his account of perception and his account of thought. Together, they make up a significant portion of his psychological writings, and his discussion of other mental states depends critically on them. These two activities, moreover, are conceived of in an analogous manner, at least with regard to their most basic forms. Each activity is triggered by its object – each, that is, is about the very thing that brings it about. This simple causal account explains the reliability of cognition: perception and thought are, in effect, transducers, bringing information about the world into our cognitive systems, because, at least in their most basic forms, they are infallibly about the causes that bring them about (An III.4 429a13–18). Other, more complex mental states are far from infallible. But they are still tethered to the world, in so far as they rest on the unambiguous and direct contact perception and thought enjoy with their objects.[29]

— Victor Caston, "Phantasia and Thought" in Blackwell Companion To Aristotle

Medieval commentary edit

The Aristotelian theory of motion came under criticism and modification during the Middle Ages. Modifications began with John Philoponus in the 6th century, who partly accepted Aristotle's theory that "continuation of motion depends on continued action of a force" but modified it to include his idea that a hurled body also acquires an inclination (or "motive power") for movement away from whatever caused it to move, an inclination that secures its continued motion. This impressed virtue would be temporary and self-expending, meaning that all motion would tend toward the form of Aristotle's natural motion.

In The Book of Healing (1027), the 11th-century Persian polymath Avicenna developed Philoponean theory into the first coherent alternative to Aristotelian theory. Inclinations in the Avicennan theory of motion were not self-consuming but permanent forces whose effects were dissipated only as a result of external agents such as air resistance, making him "the first to conceive such a permanent type of impressed virtue for non-natural motion". Such a self-motion (mayl) is "almost the opposite of the Aristotelian conception of violent motion of the projectile type, and it is rather reminiscent of the principle of inertia, i.e. Newton's first law of motion."[30]

The eldest Banū Mūsā brother, Ja'far Muhammad ibn Mūsā ibn Shākir (800-873), wrote the Astral Motion and The Force of Attraction. The Persian physicist, Ibn al-Haytham (965-1039) discussed the theory of attraction between bodies. It seems that he was aware of the magnitude of acceleration due to gravity and he discovered that the heavenly bodies "were accountable to the laws of physics".[31] During his debate with Avicenna, al-Biruni also criticized the Aristotelian theory of gravity firstly for denying the existence of levity or gravity in the celestial spheres; and, secondly, for its notion of circular motion being an innate property of the heavenly bodies.[32]

Hibat Allah Abu'l-Barakat al-Baghdaadi (1080–1165) wrote al-Mu'tabar, a critique of Aristotelian physics where he negated Aristotle's idea that a constant force produces uniform motion, as he realized that a force applied continuously produces acceleration, a fundamental law of classical mechanics and an early foreshadowing of Newton's second law of motion.[33] Like Newton, he described acceleration as the rate of change of speed.[34]

In the 14th century, Jean Buridan developed the theory of impetus as an alternative to the Aristotelian theory of motion. The theory of impetus was a precursor to the concepts of inertia and momentum in classical mechanics.[35] Buridan and Albert of Saxony also refer to Abu'l-Barakat in explaining that the acceleration of a falling body is a result of its increasing impetus.[36] In the 16th century, Al-Birjandi discussed the possibility of the Earth's rotation and, in his analysis of what might occur if the Earth were rotating, developed a hypothesis similar to Galileo's notion of "circular inertia".[37] He described it in terms of the following observational test:

"The small or large rock will fall to the Earth along the path of a line that is perpendicular to the plane (sath) of the horizon; this is witnessed by experience (tajriba). And this perpendicular is away from the tangent point of the Earth’s sphere and the plane of the perceived (hissi) horizon. This point moves with the motion of the Earth and thus there will be no difference in place of fall of the two rocks."[38]

Life and death of Aristotelian physics edit

 
Aristotle depicted by Rembrandt, 1653

The reign of Aristotelian physics, the earliest known speculative theory of physics, lasted almost two millennia. After the work of many pioneers such as Copernicus, Tycho Brahe, Galileo, Kepler, Descartes and Newton, it became generally accepted that Aristotelian physics was neither correct nor viable.[8] Despite this, it survived as a scholastic pursuit well into the seventeenth century, until universities amended their curricula.

In Europe, Aristotle's theory was first convincingly discredited by Galileo's studies. Using a telescope, Galileo observed that the Moon was not entirely smooth, but had craters and mountains, contradicting the Aristotelian idea of the incorruptibly perfect smooth Moon. Galileo also criticized this notion theoretically; a perfectly smooth Moon would reflect light unevenly like a shiny billiard ball, so that the edges of the moon's disk would have a different brightness than the point where a tangent plane reflects sunlight directly to the eye. A rough moon reflects in all directions equally, leading to a disk of approximately equal brightness which is what is observed.[39] Galileo also observed that Jupiter has moons – i.e. objects revolving around a body other than the Earth – and noted the phases of Venus, which demonstrated that Venus (and, by implication, Mercury) traveled around the Sun, not the Earth.

According to legend, Galileo dropped balls of various densities from the Tower of Pisa and found that lighter and heavier ones fell at almost the same speed. His experiments actually took place using balls rolling down inclined planes, a form of falling sufficiently slow to be measured without advanced instruments.

In a relatively dense medium such as water, a heavier body falls faster than a lighter one. This led Aristotle to speculate that the rate of falling is proportional to the weight and inversely proportional to the density of the medium. From his experience with objects falling in water, he concluded that water is approximately ten times denser than air. By weighing a volume of compressed air, Galileo showed that this overestimates the density of air by a factor of forty.[40] From his experiments with inclined planes, he concluded that if friction is neglected, all bodies fall at the same rate (which is also not true, since not only friction but also density of the medium relative to density of the bodies has to be negligible. Aristotle correctly noticed that medium density is a factor but focused on body weight instead of density. Galileo neglected medium density which led him to correct conclusion for vacuum).

Galileo also advanced a theoretical argument to support his conclusion. He asked if two bodies of different weights and different rates of fall are tied by a string, does the combined system fall faster because it is now more massive, or does the lighter body in its slower fall hold back the heavier body? The only convincing answer is neither: all the systems fall at the same rate.[39]

Followers of Aristotle were aware that the motion of falling bodies was not uniform, but picked up speed with time. Since time is an abstract quantity, the peripatetics postulated that the speed was proportional to the distance. Galileo established experimentally that the speed is proportional to the time, but he also gave a theoretical argument that the speed could not possibly be proportional to the distance. In modern terms, if the rate of fall is proportional to the distance, the differential expression for the distance y travelled after time t is:

 

with the condition that  . Galileo demonstrated that this system would stay at   for all time. If a perturbation set the system into motion somehow, the object would pick up speed exponentially in time, not quadratically.[40]

Standing on the surface of the Moon in 1971, David Scott famously repeated Galileo's experiment by dropping a feather and a hammer from each hand at the same time. In the absence of a substantial atmosphere, the two objects fell and hit the Moon's surface at the same time.[41]

The first convincing mathematical theory of gravity – in which two masses are attracted toward each other by a force whose effect decreases according to the inverse square of the distance between them – was Newton's law of universal gravitation. This, in turn, was replaced by the General theory of relativity due to Albert Einstein.

Modern evaluations of Aristotle's physics edit

Modern scholars differ in their opinions of whether Aristotle's physics were sufficiently based on empirical observations to qualify as science, or else whether they were derived primarily from philosophical speculation and thus fail to satisfy the scientific method.[42]

Carlo Rovelli has argued that Aristotle's physics are an accurate and non-intuitive representation of a particular domain (motion in fluids), and thus are just as scientific as Newton's laws of motion, which also are accurate in some domains while failing in others (i.e. special and general relativity).[42]

As listed in the Corpus Aristotelicum edit

Key
[*]Authenticity disputed.
StrikethroughGenerally agreed to be spurious.
Bekker
number
Work Latin name
Physics (natural philosophy)
184a Physics Physica
268a On the Heavens De Caelo
314a On Generation and Corruption De Generatione et Corruptione
338a Meteorology Meteorologica
391a On the Universe De Mundo
402a On the Soul De Anima
 
Parva Naturalia  ("Little Physical Treatises")
436a Sense and Sensibilia De Sensu et Sensibilibus
449b On Memory De Memoria et Reminiscentia
453b On Sleep De Somno et Vigilia
458a On Dreams De Insomniis
462b On Divination in Sleep De Divinatione per Somnum
464b On Length and Shortness
of Life
De Longitudine et Brevitate Vitae
467b On Youth, Old Age, Life
and Death, and Respiration
De Juventute et Senectute, De
Vita et Morte, De Respiratione
 
481a On Breath De Spiritu
 
486a History of Animals Historia Animalium
639a Parts of Animals De Partibus Animalium
698a Movement of Animals De Motu Animalium
704a Progression of Animals De Incessu Animalium
715a Generation of Animals De Generatione Animalium
 
791a On Colors De Coloribus
800a On Things Heard De audibilibus
805a Physiognomonics Physiognomonica
815a On Plants De Plantis
830a On Marvellous Things Heard De mirabilibus auscultationibus
847a Mechanics Mechanica
859a Problems* Problemata*
968a On Indivisible Lines De Lineis Insecabilibus
973a The Situations and Names
of Winds
Ventorum Situs
974a On Melissus, Xenophanes,
and Gorgias
De Melisso, Xenophane, Gorgia


See also edit

Notes edit

a ^ Here, the term "Earth" does not refer to planet Earth, known by modern science to be composed of a large number of chemical elements. Modern chemical elements are not conceptually similar to Aristotle's elements; the term "air", for instance, does not refer to breathable air.

References edit

  1. ^ Lang, H.S. (2007). The Order of Nature in Aristotle's Physics: Place and the Elements. Cambridge University Press. p. 290. ISBN 9780521042291.
  2. ^ White, Michael J. (2009). "Aristotle on the Infinite, Space, and Time". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. p. 260.
  3. ^ a b Rovelli, Carlo (2015). "Aristotle's Physics: A Physicist's Look". Journal of the American Philosophical Association. 1 (1): 23–40. arXiv:1312.4057. doi:10.1017/apa.2014.11. S2CID 44193681.
  4. ^ "Medieval Universe".
  5. ^ History of Science
  6. ^ "Physics of Aristotle vs. The Physics of Galileo". from the original on 11 April 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2009.
  7. ^ a b "hep.fsu.edu" (PDF). Retrieved 26 March 2007.
  8. ^ a b c "Aristotle's physics". Retrieved 6 April 2009.
  9. ^ Aristotle, meteorology.
  10. ^ Sorabji, R. (2005). The Philosophy of the Commentators, 200-600 AD: Physics. G – Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series. Cornell University Press. p. 352. ISBN 978-0-8014-8988-4. LCCN 2004063547.
  11. ^ De Caelo II. 13-14.
  12. ^ For instance, by Simplicius in his Corollaries on Place.
  13. ^ El-Bizri, Nader (2007). "In Defence of the Sovereignty of Philosophy: al-Baghdadi's Critique of Ibn al-Haytham's Geometrisation of Place". Arabic Sciences and Philosophy. 17 (1): 57–80. doi:10.1017/s0957423907000367. S2CID 170960993.
  14. ^ Tim Maudlin (22 July 2012). Philosophy of Physics: Space and Time: Space and Time (Princeton Foundations of Contemporary Philosophy) (p. 2). Princeton University Press. Kindle Edition. "The element earth's natural motion is to fall— that is, to move downward. Water also strives to move downward but with less initiative than earth: a stone will sink though water, demonstrating its overpowering natural tendency to descend. Fire naturally rises, as anyone who has watched a bonfire can attest, as does air, but with less vigor."
  15. ^ a b Bodnar, Istvan, "Aristotle's Natural Philosophy" in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2012 Edition, ed. Edward N. Zalta).
  16. ^ Gindikin, S.G. (1988). Tales of Physicists and Mathematicians. Birkh. p. 29. ISBN 9780817633172. LCCN 87024971.
  17. ^ Lindberg, D. (2008), The beginnings of western science: The European scientific tradition in philosophical, religious, and institutional context, prehistory to AD 1450 (2nd ed.), University of Chicago Press.
  18. ^ Lang, Helen S., The Order of Nature in Aristotle's Physics: Place and the Elements (1998).
  19. ^ Tully; Shaya; Karachentsev; Courtois; Kocevski; Rizzi; Peel (2008). "Our Peculiar Motion Away From the Local Void". The Astrophysical Journal. 676 (1): 184–205. arXiv:0705.4139. Bibcode:2008ApJ...676..184T. doi:10.1086/527428. S2CID 14738309.
  20. ^ Aristotle, Physics 194 b17–20; see also: Posterior Analytics 71 b9–11; 94 a20.
  21. ^ a b "Four Causes". Falcon, Andrea. Aristotle on Causality. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2008.
  22. ^ Aristotle, "Book 5, section 1013a", Metaphysics, Hugh Tredennick (trans.) Aristotle in 23 Volumes, Vols. 17, 18, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1933, 1989; (hosted at perseus.tufts.edu.) Aristotle also discusses the four causes in his Physics, Book B, chapter 3.
  23. ^ a b Hankinson, R.J. "The Theory of the Physics". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. p. 216.
  24. ^ a b Hankinson, R.J. "Causes". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. p. 217.
  25. ^ Aristotle. Parts of Animals I.1.
  26. ^ Hankinson, R.J. "Causes". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. p. 218.
  27. ^ a b Henry, Devin M. (2009). "Generation of Animals". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. p. 368.
  28. ^ Hankinson, R.J. "Causes". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. p. 222.
  29. ^ a b Caston, Victor (2009). "Phantasia and Thought". Blackwell Companion to Aristotle. pp. 322–2233.
  30. ^ Aydin Sayili (1987), "Ibn Sīnā and Buridan on the Motion of the Projectile", Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 500 (1): 477–482 [477]
  31. ^ Duhem, Pierre (1908, 1969). To Save the Phenomena: An Essay on the Idea of Physical theory from Plato to Galileo, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, p. 28.
  32. ^ Rafik Berjak and Muzaffar Iqbal, "Ibn Sina--Al-Biruni correspondence", Islam & Science, June 2003.
  33. ^ Shlomo Pines (1970). "Abu'l-Barakāt al-Baghdādī, Hibat Allah". Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 26–28. ISBN 0-684-10114-9.
    (cf. Abel B. Franco (October 2003). "Avempace, Projectile Motion, and Impetus Theory", Journal of the History of Ideas 64 (4), pp. 521–546 [528].)
  34. ^ A. C. Crombie, Augustine to Galileo 2, p. 67.
  35. ^ Aydin Sayili (1987), "Ibn Sīnā and Buridan on the Motion of the Projectile", Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 500 (1): 477–482
  36. ^ Gutman, Oliver (2003). Pseudo-Avicenna, Liber Celi Et Mundi: A Critical Edition. Brill Publishers. p. 193. ISBN 90-04-13228-7.
  37. ^ (Ragep & Al-Qushji 2001, pp. 63–4)
  38. ^ (Ragep 2001, pp. 152–3)
  39. ^ a b Galileo Galilei, Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems.
  40. ^ a b Galileo Galilei, Two New Sciences.
  41. ^ "Apollo 15 Hammer-Feather Drop".
  42. ^ a b Rovelli, Carlo (2013). "Aristotle's Physics: A Physicist's Look". Journal of the American Philosophical Association. 1 (1): 23–40. arXiv:1312.4057. doi:10.1017/apa.2014.11. S2CID 44193681.

Sources edit

  • H. Carteron (1965) "Does Aristotle Have a Mechanics?" in Articles on Aristotle 1. Science eds. Jonathan Barnes, Malcolm Schofield, Richard Sorabji (London: General Duckworth and Company Limited), 161–174.
  • Ragep, F. Jamil (2001). "Tusi and Copernicus: The Earth's Motion in Context". Science in Context. Cambridge University Press. 14 (1–2): 145–163. doi:10.1017/s0269889701000060. S2CID 145372613.
  • Ragep, F. Jamil; Al-Qushji, Ali (2001). "Freeing Astronomy from Philosophy: An Aspect of Islamic Influence on Science". Osiris. 2nd Series. 16 (Science in Theistic Contexts: Cognitive Dimensions): 49–64 and 66–71. Bibcode:2001Osir...16...49R. doi:10.1086/649338. S2CID 142586786.

Further reading edit

  • Katalin Martinás, "Aristotelian Thermodynamics" in Thermodynamics: history and philosophy: facts, trends, debates (Veszprém, Hungary 23–28 July 1990), pp. 285–303.

aristotelian, physics, form, natural, science, natural, philosophy, described, works, greek, philosopher, aristotle, work, physics, aristotle, intended, establish, general, principles, change, that, govern, natural, bodies, both, living, inanimate, celestial, . Aristotelian physics is the form of natural science or natural philosophy described in the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle 384 322 BC In his work Physics Aristotle intended to establish general principles of change that govern all natural bodies both living and inanimate celestial and terrestrial including all motion change with respect to place quantitative change change with respect to size or number qualitative change and substantial change coming to be coming into existence generation or passing away no longer existing corruption To Aristotle physics was a broad field that included subjects that would now be called the philosophy of mind sensory experience memory anatomy and biology It constitutes the foundation of the thought underlying many of his works Key concepts of Aristotelian physics include the structuring of the cosmos into concentric spheres with the Earth at the centre and celestial spheres around it The terrestrial sphere was made of four elements namely earth air fire and water subject to change and decay The celestial spheres were made of a fifth element an unchangeable aether Objects made of these elements have natural motions those of earth and water tend to fall those of air and fire to rise The speed of such motion depends on their weights and the density of the medium Aristotle argued that a vacuum could not exist as speeds would become infinite Aristotle described four causes or explanations of change as seen on earth the material formal efficient and final causes of things As regards living things Aristotle s biology relied on observation of natural kinds both the basic kinds and the groups to which these belonged He did not conduct experiments in the modern sense but relied on amassing data observational procedures such as dissection and making hypotheses about relationships between measurable quantities such as body size and lifespan Contents 1 Methods 2 Concepts 2 1 Elements and spheres 2 1 1 Celestial spheres 2 2 Terrestrial change 2 3 Natural place 2 4 Natural motion 2 5 Unnatural motion 2 5 1 Chance 2 6 Continuum and vacuum 2 7 Four causes 2 7 1 Material 2 7 2 Formal 2 7 3 Efficient 2 7 4 Final 2 8 Biology 2 8 1 Organism and mechanism 2 8 2 Psychology 3 Medieval commentary 4 Life and death of Aristotelian physics 5 Modern evaluations of Aristotle s physics 6 As listed in the Corpus Aristotelicum 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further readingMethods edit nbsp A page from an 1837 edition of the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle s Physica a book addressing a variety of subjects including the philosophy of nature and topics now part of its modern day namesake physics nature is everywhere the cause of order 1 Aristotle Physics VIII 1 While consistent with common human experience Aristotle s principles were not based on controlled quantitative experiments so they do not describe our universe in the precise quantitative way now expected of science Contemporaries of Aristotle like Aristarchus rejected these principles in favor of heliocentrism but their ideas were not widely accepted Aristotle s principles were difficult to disprove merely through casual everyday observation but later development of the scientific method challenged his views with experiments and careful measurement using increasingly advanced technology such as the telescope and vacuum pump In claiming novelty for their doctrines those natural philosophers who developed the new science of the seventeenth century frequently contrasted Aristotelian physics with their own Physics of the former sort so they claimed emphasized the qualitative at the expense of the quantitative neglected mathematics and its proper role in physics particularly in the analysis of local motion and relied on such suspect explanatory principles as final causes and occult essences Yet in his Physics Aristotle characterizes physics or the science of nature as pertaining to magnitudes megethe motion or process or gradual change kinesis and time chronon Phys III 4 202b30 1 Indeed the Physics is largely concerned with an analysis of motion particularly local motion and the other concepts that Aristotle believes are requisite to that analysis 2 Michael J White Aristotle on the Infinite Space and Time in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle There are clear differences between modern and Aristotelian physics the main being the use of mathematics largely absent in Aristotle Some recent studies however have re evaluated Aristotle s physics stressing both its empirical validity and its continuity with modern physics 3 Concepts edit nbsp Peter Apian s 1524 representation of the universe heavily influenced by Aristotle s ideas The terrestrial spheres of water and earth shown in the form of continents and oceans are at the center of the universe immediately surrounded by the spheres of air and then fire where meteorites and comets were believed to originate The surrounding celestial spheres from inner to outer are those of the Moon Mercury Venus Sun Mars Jupiter and Saturn each indicated by a planet symbol The eighth sphere is the firmament of fixed stars which include the visible constellations The precession of the equinoxes caused a gap between the visible and notional divisions of the zodiac so medieval Christian astronomers created a ninth sphere the Crystallinum which holds an unchanging version of the zodiac 4 5 The tenth sphere is that of the divine prime mover proposed by Aristotle though each sphere would have an unmoved mover Above that Christian theology placed the Empire of God What this diagram does not show is how Aristotle explained the complicated curves that the planets make in the sky To preserve the principle of perfect circular motion he proposed that each planet was moved by several nested spheres with the poles of each connected to the next outermost but with axes of rotation offset from each other Though Aristotle left the number of spheres open to empirical determination he proposed adding to the many sphere models of previous astronomers resulting in a total of 44 or 55 celestial spheres Elements and spheres edit Main article Classical element Aristotle divided his universe into terrestrial spheres which were corruptible and where humans lived and moving but otherwise unchanging celestial spheres Aristotle believed that four classical elements make up everything in the terrestrial spheres 6 earth air fire and water a 7 He also held that the heavens are made of a special weightless and incorruptible i e unchangeable fifth element called aether 7 Aether also has the name quintessence meaning literally fifth being 8 Aristotle considered heavy matter such as iron and other metals to consist primarily of the element earth with a smaller amount of the other three terrestrial elements Other lighter objects he believed have less earth relative to the other three elements in their composition 8 The four classical elements were not invented by Aristotle they were originated by Empedocles During the Scientific Revolution the ancient theory of classical elements was found to be incorrect and was replaced by the empirically tested concept of chemical elements Celestial spheres edit Main articles Aether classical element and Dynamics of the celestial spheres According to Aristotle the Sun Moon planets and stars are embedded in perfectly concentric crystal spheres that rotate eternally at fixed rates Because the celestial spheres are incapable of any change except rotation the terrestrial sphere of fire must account for the heat starlight and occasional meteorites 9 The lowest lunar sphere is the only celestial sphere that actually comes in contact with the sublunary orb s changeable terrestrial matter dragging the rarefied fire and air along underneath as it rotates 10 Like Homer s aethere aἰ8hr the pure air of Mount Olympus was the divine counterpart of the air breathed by mortal beings ahr aer The celestial spheres are composed of the special element aether eternal and unchanging the sole capability of which is a uniform circular motion at a given rate relative to the diurnal motion of the outermost sphere of fixed stars The concentric aetherial cheek by jowl crystal spheres that carry the Sun Moon and stars move eternally with unchanging circular motion Spheres are embedded within spheres to account for the wandering stars i e the planets which in comparison with the Sun Moon and stars appear to move erratically Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn are the only planets including minor planets which were visible before the invention of the telescope which is why Neptune and Uranus are not included nor are any asteroids Later the belief that all spheres are concentric was forsaken in favor of Ptolemy s deferent and epicycle model Aristotle submits to the calculations of astronomers regarding the total number of spheres and various accounts give a number in the neighborhood of fifty spheres An unmoved mover is assumed for each sphere including a prime mover for the sphere of fixed stars The unmoved movers do not push the spheres nor could they being immaterial and dimensionless but are the final cause of the spheres motion i e they explain it in a way that s similar to the explanation the soul is moved by beauty Terrestrial change edit nbsp The four terrestrial elementsUnlike the eternal and unchanging celestial aether each of the four terrestrial elements are capable of changing into either of the two elements they share a property with e g the cold and wet water can transform into the hot and wet air or the cold and dry earth Any apparent change from cold and wet into the hot and dry fire is actually a two step process as first one of the property changes then the other These properties are predicated of an actual substance relative to the work it is able to do that of heating or chilling and of desiccating or moistening The four elements exist only with regard to this capacity and relative to some potential work The celestial element is eternal and unchanging so only the four terrestrial elements account for coming to be and passing away or in the terms of Aristotle s On Generation and Corruption Perὶ genesews kaὶ f8orᾶs generation and corruption Natural place edit The Aristotelian explanation of gravity is that all bodies move toward their natural place For the elements earth and water that place is the center of the geocentric universe 11 the natural place of water is a concentric shell around the Earth because earth is heavier it sinks in water The natural place of air is likewise a concentric shell surrounding that of water bubbles rise in water Finally the natural place of fire is higher than that of air but below the innermost celestial sphere carrying the Moon In Book Delta of his Physics IV 5 Aristotle defines topos place in terms of two bodies one of which contains the other a place is where the inner surface of the former the containing body touches the outer surface of the other the contained body This definition remained dominant until the beginning of the 17th century even though it had been questioned and debated by philosophers since antiquity 12 The most significant early critique was made in terms of geometry by the 11th century Arab polymath al Hasan Ibn al Haytham Alhazen in his Discourse on Place 13 Natural motion edit Terrestrial objects rise or fall to a greater or lesser extent according to the ratio of the four elements of which they are composed For example earth the heaviest element and water fall toward the center of the cosmos hence the Earth and for the most part its oceans will have already come to rest there At the opposite extreme the lightest elements air and especially fire rise up and away from the center 14 The elements are not proper substances in Aristotelian theory or the modern sense of the word Instead they are abstractions used to explain the varying natures and behaviors of actual materials in terms of ratios between them Motion and change are closely related in Aristotelian physics Motion according to Aristotle involved a change from potentiality to actuality 15 He gave example of four types of change namely change in substance in quality in quantity and in place 15 nbsp Aristotle s laws of motion In Physics he states that objects fall at a speed proportional to their weight and inversely proportional to the density of the fluid they are immersed in This is a correct approximation for objects in Earth s gravitational field moving in air or water 3 Aristotle proposed that the speed at which two identically shaped objects sink or fall is directly proportional to their weights and inversely proportional to the density of the medium through which they move 16 While describing their terminal velocity Aristotle must stipulate that there would be no limit at which to compare the speed of atoms falling through a vacuum they could move indefinitely fast because there would be no particular place for them to come to rest in the void Now however it is understood that at any time prior to achieving terminal velocity in a relatively resistance free medium like air two such objects are expected to have nearly identical speeds because both are experiencing a force of gravity proportional to their masses and have thus been accelerating at nearly the same rate This became especially apparent from the eighteenth century when partial vacuum experiments began to be made but some two hundred years earlier Galileo had already demonstrated that objects of different weights reach the ground in similar times 17 Unnatural motion edit Apart from the natural tendency of terrestrial exhalations to rise and objects to fall unnatural or forced motion from side to side results from the turbulent collision and sliding of the objects as well as transmutation between the elements On Generation and Corruption Chance edit In his Physics Aristotle examines accidents symbebhkos symbebekos that have no cause but chance Nor is there any definite cause for an accident but only chance tyxh tyche namely an indefinite ἀoriston aoriston cause Metaphysics V 1025a25 It is obvious that there are principles and causes which are generable and destructible apart from the actual processes of generation and destruction for if this is not true everything will be of necessity that is if there must necessarily be some cause other than accidental of that which is generated and destroyed Will this be or not Yes if this happens otherwise not Metaphysics VI 1027a29 Continuum and vacuum edit Aristotle argues against the indivisibles of Democritus which differ considerably from the historical and the modern use of the term atom As a place without anything existing at or within it Aristotle argued against the possibility of a vacuum or void Because he believed that the speed of an object s motion is proportional to the force being applied or in the case of natural motion the object s weight and inversely proportional to the density of the medium he reasoned that objects moving in a void would move indefinitely fast and thus any and all objects surrounding the void would immediately fill it The void therefore could never form 18 The voids of modern day astronomy such as the Local Void adjacent to our own galaxy have the opposite effect ultimately bodies off center are ejected from the void due to the gravity of the material outside 19 Four causes edit Main articles Four causes and Teleology According to Aristotle there are four ways to explain the aitia or causes of change He writes that we do not have knowledge of a thing until we have grasped its why that is to say its cause 20 21 Aristotle held that there were four kinds of causes 21 22 Material edit The material cause of a thing is that of which it is made For a table that might be wood for a statue that might be bronze or marble In one way we say that the aition is that out of which as existing something comes to be like the bronze for the statue the silver for the phial and their genera 194b2 3 6 By genera Aristotle means more general ways of classifying the matter e g metal material and that will become important A little later on he broadens the range of the material cause to include letters of syllables fire and the other elements of physical bodies parts of wholes and even premisses of conclusions Aristotle re iterates this claim in slightly different terms in An Post II 11 23 R J Hankinson The Theory of the Physics in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle Formal edit The formal cause of a thing is the essential property that makes it the kind of thing it is In Metaphysics Book A Aristotle emphasizes that form is closely related to essence and definition He says for example that the ratio 2 1 and number in general is the cause of the octave Another cause is the form and the exemplar this is the formula logos of the essence to ti en einai and its genera for instance the ratio 2 1 of the octave Phys 11 3 194b26 8 Form is not just shape We are asking and this is the connection with essence particularly in its canonical Aristotelian formulation what it is to be some thing And it is a feature of musical harmonics first noted and wondered at by the Pythagoreans that intervals of this type do indeed exhibit this ratio in some form in the instruments used to create them the length of pipes of strings etc In some sense the ratio explains what all the intervals have in common why they turn out the same 24 R J Hankinson Cause in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle Efficient edit The efficient cause of a thing is the primary agency by which its matter took its form For example the efficient cause of a baby is a parent of the same species and that of a table is a carpenter who knows the form of the table In his Physics II 194b29 32 Aristotle writes there is that which is the primary originator of the change and of its cessation such as the deliberator who is responsible sc for the action and the father of the child and in general the producer of the thing produced and the changer of the thing changed Aristotle s examples here are instructive one case of mental and one of physical causation followed by a perfectly general characterization But they conceal or at any rate fail to make patent a crucial feature of Aristotle s concept of efficient causation and one which serves to distinguish it from most modern homonyms For Aristotle any process requires a constantly operative efficient cause as long as it continues This commitment appears most starkly to modern eyes in Aristotle s discussion of projectile motion what keeps the projectile moving after it leaves the hand Impetus momentum much less inertia are not possible answers There must be a mover distinct at least in some sense from the thing moved which is exercising its motive capacity at every moment of the projectile s flight see Phys VIII 10 266b29 267a11 Similarly in every case of animal generation there is always some thing responsible for the continuity of that generation although it may do so by way of some intervening instrument Phys II 3 194b35 195a3 24 R J Hankinson Causes in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle Final edit The final cause is that for the sake of which something takes place its aim or teleological purpose for a germinating seed it is the adult plant 25 for a ball at the top of a ramp it is coming to rest at the bottom for an eye it is seeing for a knife it is cutting Goals have an explanatory function that is a commonplace at least in the context of action ascriptions Less of a commonplace is the view espoused by Aristotle that finality and purpose are to be found throughout nature which is for him the realm of those things which contain within themselves principles of movement and rest i e efficient causes thus it makes sense to attribute purposes not only to natural things themselves but also to their parts the parts of a natural whole exist for the sake of the whole As Aristotle himself notes for the sake of locutions are ambiguous A is for the sake of B may mean that A exists or is undertaken in order to bring B about or it may mean that A is for B s benefit An II 4 415b2 3 20 1 but both types of finality have he thinks a crucial role to play in natural as well as deliberative contexts Thus a man may exercise for the sake of his health and so health and not just the hope of achieving it is the cause of his action this distinction is not trivial But the eyelids are for the sake of the eye to protect it PA II 1 3 and the eye for the sake of the animal as a whole to help it function properly cf An II 7 26 R J Hankinson Causes in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle Biology edit Main article Aristotle s biology According to Aristotle the science of living things proceeds by gathering observations about each natural kind of animal organizing them into genera and species the differentiae in History of Animals and then going on to study the causes in Parts of Animals and Generation of Animals his three main biological works 27 The four causes of animal generation can be summarized as follows The mother and father represent the material and efficient causes respectively The mother provides the matter out of which the embryo is formed while the father provides the agency that informs that material and triggers its development The formal cause is the definition of the animal s substantial being GA I 1 715a4 ho logos tes ousias The final cause is the adult form which is the end for the sake of which development takes place 27 Devin M Henry Generation of Animals in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle Organism and mechanism edit Main articles Organism philosophy and Mechanism philosophy The four elements make up the uniform materials such as blood flesh and bone which are themselves the matter out of which are created the non uniform organs of the body e g the heart liver and hands which in turn as parts are matter for the functioning body as a whole PA II 1 646a 13 24 23 There is a certain obvious conceptual economy about the view that in natural processes naturally constituted things simply seek to realize in full actuality the potentials contained within them indeed this is what is for them to be natural on the other hand as the detractors of Aristotelianism from the seventeenth century on were not slow to point out this economy is won at the expense of any serious empirical content Mechanism at least as practiced by Aristotle s contemporaries and predecessors may have been explanatorily inadequate but at least it was an attempt at a general account given in reductive terms of the lawlike connections between things Simply introducing what later reductionists were to scoff at as occult qualities does not explain it merely in the manner of Moliere s famous satirical joke serves to re describe the effect Formal talk or so it is said is vacuous Things are not however quite as bleak as this For one thing there s no point in trying to engage in reductionist science if you don t have the wherewithal empirical and conceptual to do so successfully science shouldn t be simply unsubstantiated speculative metaphysics But more than that there is a point to describing the world in such teleologically loaded terms it makes sense of things in a way that atomist speculations do not And further Aristotle s talk of species forms is not as empty as his opponents would insinuate He doesn t simply say that things do what they do because that s the sort of thing they do the whole point of his classificatory biology most clearly exemplified in PA is to show what sorts of function go with what which presuppose which and which are subservient to which And in this sense formal or functional biology is susceptible of a type of reductionism We start he tells us with the basic animal kinds which we all pre theoretically although not indefeasibly recognize cf PA I 4 but we then go on to show how their parts relate to one another why it is for instance that only blooded creatures have lungs and how certain structures in one species are analogous or homologous to those in another such as scales in fish feathers in birds hair in mammals And the answers for Aristotle are to be found in the economy of functions and how they all contribute to the overall well being the final cause in this sense of the animal 28 R J Hankinson The Relations between the Causes in Blackwell Companion to Aristotle See also Organic form Psychology edit According to Aristotle perception and thought are similar though not exactly alike in that perception is concerned only with the external objects that are acting on our sense organs at any given time whereas we can think about anything we choose Thought is about universal forms in so far as they have been successfully understood based on our memory of having encountered instances of those forms directly 29 Aristotle s theory of cognition rests on two central pillars his account of perception and his account of thought Together they make up a significant portion of his psychological writings and his discussion of other mental states depends critically on them These two activities moreover are conceived of in an analogous manner at least with regard to their most basic forms Each activity is triggered by its object each that is is about the very thing that brings it about This simple causal account explains the reliability of cognition perception and thought are in effect transducers bringing information about the world into our cognitive systems because at least in their most basic forms they are infallibly about the causes that bring them about An III 4 429a13 18 Other more complex mental states are far from infallible But they are still tethered to the world in so far as they rest on the unambiguous and direct contact perception and thought enjoy with their objects 29 Victor Caston Phantasia and Thought in Blackwell Companion To AristotleMedieval commentary editMain article Theory of impetus The Aristotelian theory of motion came under criticism and modification during the Middle Ages Modifications began with John Philoponus in the 6th century who partly accepted Aristotle s theory that continuation of motion depends on continued action of a force but modified it to include his idea that a hurled body also acquires an inclination or motive power for movement away from whatever caused it to move an inclination that secures its continued motion This impressed virtue would be temporary and self expending meaning that all motion would tend toward the form of Aristotle s natural motion In The Book of Healing 1027 the 11th century Persian polymath Avicenna developed Philoponean theory into the first coherent alternative to Aristotelian theory Inclinations in the Avicennan theory of motion were not self consuming but permanent forces whose effects were dissipated only as a result of external agents such as air resistance making him the first to conceive such a permanent type of impressed virtue for non natural motion Such a self motion mayl is almost the opposite of the Aristotelian conception of violent motion of the projectile type and it is rather reminiscent of the principle of inertia i e Newton s first law of motion 30 The eldest Banu Musa brother Ja far Muhammad ibn Musa ibn Shakir 800 873 wrote the Astral Motion and The Force of Attraction The Persian physicist Ibn al Haytham 965 1039 discussed the theory of attraction between bodies It seems that he was aware of the magnitude of acceleration due to gravity and he discovered that the heavenly bodies were accountable to the laws of physics 31 During his debate with Avicenna al Biruni also criticized the Aristotelian theory of gravity firstly for denying the existence of levity or gravity in the celestial spheres and secondly for its notion of circular motion being an innate property of the heavenly bodies 32 Hibat Allah Abu l Barakat al Baghdaadi 1080 1165 wrote al Mu tabar a critique of Aristotelian physics where he negated Aristotle s idea that a constant force produces uniform motion as he realized that a force applied continuously produces acceleration a fundamental law of classical mechanics and an early foreshadowing of Newton s second law of motion 33 Like Newton he described acceleration as the rate of change of speed 34 In the 14th century Jean Buridan developed the theory of impetus as an alternative to the Aristotelian theory of motion The theory of impetus was a precursor to the concepts of inertia and momentum in classical mechanics 35 Buridan and Albert of Saxony also refer to Abu l Barakat in explaining that the acceleration of a falling body is a result of its increasing impetus 36 In the 16th century Al Birjandi discussed the possibility of the Earth s rotation and in his analysis of what might occur if the Earth were rotating developed a hypothesis similar to Galileo s notion of circular inertia 37 He described it in terms of the following observational test The small or large rock will fall to the Earth along the path of a line that is perpendicular to the plane sath of the horizon this is witnessed by experience tajriba And this perpendicular is away from the tangent point of the Earth s sphere and the plane of the perceived hissi horizon This point moves with the motion of the Earth and thus there will be no difference in place of fall of the two rocks 38 Life and death of Aristotelian physics edit nbsp Aristotle depicted by Rembrandt 1653The reign of Aristotelian physics the earliest known speculative theory of physics lasted almost two millennia After the work of many pioneers such as Copernicus Tycho Brahe Galileo Kepler Descartes and Newton it became generally accepted that Aristotelian physics was neither correct nor viable 8 Despite this it survived as a scholastic pursuit well into the seventeenth century until universities amended their curricula In Europe Aristotle s theory was first convincingly discredited by Galileo s studies Using a telescope Galileo observed that the Moon was not entirely smooth but had craters and mountains contradicting the Aristotelian idea of the incorruptibly perfect smooth Moon Galileo also criticized this notion theoretically a perfectly smooth Moon would reflect light unevenly like a shiny billiard ball so that the edges of the moon s disk would have a different brightness than the point where a tangent plane reflects sunlight directly to the eye A rough moon reflects in all directions equally leading to a disk of approximately equal brightness which is what is observed 39 Galileo also observed that Jupiter has moons i e objects revolving around a body other than the Earth and noted the phases of Venus which demonstrated that Venus and by implication Mercury traveled around the Sun not the Earth According to legend Galileo dropped balls of various densities from the Tower of Pisa and found that lighter and heavier ones fell at almost the same speed His experiments actually took place using balls rolling down inclined planes a form of falling sufficiently slow to be measured without advanced instruments In a relatively dense medium such as water a heavier body falls faster than a lighter one This led Aristotle to speculate that the rate of falling is proportional to the weight and inversely proportional to the density of the medium From his experience with objects falling in water he concluded that water is approximately ten times denser than air By weighing a volume of compressed air Galileo showed that this overestimates the density of air by a factor of forty 40 From his experiments with inclined planes he concluded that if friction is neglected all bodies fall at the same rate which is also not true since not only friction but also density of the medium relative to density of the bodies has to be negligible Aristotle correctly noticed that medium density is a factor but focused on body weight instead of density Galileo neglected medium density which led him to correct conclusion for vacuum Galileo also advanced a theoretical argument to support his conclusion He asked if two bodies of different weights and different rates of fall are tied by a string does the combined system fall faster because it is now more massive or does the lighter body in its slower fall hold back the heavier body The only convincing answer is neither all the systems fall at the same rate 39 Followers of Aristotle were aware that the motion of falling bodies was not uniform but picked up speed with time Since time is an abstract quantity the peripatetics postulated that the speed was proportional to the distance Galileo established experimentally that the speed is proportional to the time but he also gave a theoretical argument that the speed could not possibly be proportional to the distance In modern terms if the rate of fall is proportional to the distance the differential expression for the distance y travelled after time t is d y d t y displaystyle dy over dt propto y nbsp with the condition that y 0 0 displaystyle y 0 0 nbsp Galileo demonstrated that this system would stay at y 0 displaystyle y 0 nbsp for all time If a perturbation set the system into motion somehow the object would pick up speed exponentially in time not quadratically 40 Standing on the surface of the Moon in 1971 David Scott famously repeated Galileo s experiment by dropping a feather and a hammer from each hand at the same time In the absence of a substantial atmosphere the two objects fell and hit the Moon s surface at the same time 41 The first convincing mathematical theory of gravity in which two masses are attracted toward each other by a force whose effect decreases according to the inverse square of the distance between them was Newton s law of universal gravitation This in turn was replaced by the General theory of relativity due to Albert Einstein Further information GravityModern evaluations of Aristotle s physics editModern scholars differ in their opinions of whether Aristotle s physics were sufficiently based on empirical observations to qualify as science or else whether they were derived primarily from philosophical speculation and thus fail to satisfy the scientific method 42 Carlo Rovelli has argued that Aristotle s physics are an accurate and non intuitive representation of a particular domain motion in fluids and thus are just as scientific as Newton s laws of motion which also are accurate in some domains while failing in others i e special and general relativity 42 As listed in the Corpus Aristotelicum editKey Authenticity disputed StrikethroughGenerally agreed to be spurious Bekkernumber Work Latin namePhysics natural philosophy 184a Physics Physica268a On the Heavens De Caelo314a On Generation and Corruption De Generatione et Corruptione338a Meteorology Meteorologica391a On the Universe De Mundo402a On the Soul De Anima Parva Naturalia Little Physical Treatises 436a Sense and Sensibilia De Sensu et Sensibilibus449b On Memory De Memoria et Reminiscentia453b On Sleep De Somno et Vigilia458a On Dreams De Insomniis462b On Divination in Sleep De Divinatione per Somnum464b On Length and Shortnessof Life De Longitudine et Brevitate Vitae467b On Youth Old Age Lifeand Death and Respiration De Juventute et Senectute DeVita et Morte De Respiratione 481a On Breath De Spiritu 486a History of Animals Historia Animalium639a Parts of Animals De Partibus Animalium698a Movement of Animals De Motu Animalium704a Progression of Animals De Incessu Animalium715a Generation of Animals De Generatione Animalium 791a On Colors De Coloribus800a On Things Heard De audibilibus805a Physiognomonics Physiognomonica815a On Plants De Plantis830a On Marvellous Things Heard De mirabilibus auscultationibus847a Mechanics Mechanica859a Problems Problemata 968a On Indivisible Lines De Lineis Insecabilibus973a The Situations and Namesof Winds Ventorum Situs974a On Melissus Xenophanes and Gorgias De Melisso Xenophane GorgiaSee also edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Aristotelian physics Minima naturalia a hylomorphic concept suggested by Aristotle broadly analogous in Peripatetic and Scholastic physical speculation to the atoms of EpicureanismNotes edita Here the term Earth does not refer to planet Earth known by modern science to be composed of a large number of chemical elements Modern chemical elements are not conceptually similar to Aristotle s elements the term air for instance does not refer to breathable air References edit Lang H S 2007 The Order of Nature in Aristotle s Physics Place and the Elements Cambridge University Press p 290 ISBN 9780521042291 White Michael J 2009 Aristotle on the Infinite Space and Time Blackwell Companion to Aristotle p 260 a b Rovelli Carlo 2015 Aristotle s Physics A Physicist s Look Journal of the American Philosophical Association 1 1 23 40 arXiv 1312 4057 doi 10 1017 apa 2014 11 S2CID 44193681 Medieval Universe History of Science Physics of Aristotle vs The Physics of Galileo Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2009 a b hep fsu edu PDF Retrieved 26 March 2007 a b c Aristotle s physics Retrieved 6 April 2009 Aristotle meteorology Sorabji R 2005 The Philosophy of the Commentators 200 600 AD Physics G Reference Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series Cornell University Press p 352 ISBN 978 0 8014 8988 4 LCCN 2004063547 De Caelo II 13 14 For instance by Simplicius in his Corollaries on Place El Bizri Nader 2007 In Defence of the Sovereignty of Philosophy al Baghdadi s Critique of Ibn al Haytham s Geometrisation of Place Arabic Sciences and Philosophy 17 1 57 80 doi 10 1017 s0957423907000367 S2CID 170960993 Tim Maudlin 22 July 2012 Philosophy of Physics Space and Time Space and Time Princeton Foundations of Contemporary Philosophy p 2 Princeton University Press Kindle Edition The element earth s natural motion is to fall that is to move downward Water also strives to move downward but with less initiative than earth a stone will sink though water demonstrating its overpowering natural tendency to descend Fire naturally rises as anyone who has watched a bonfire can attest as does air but with less vigor a b Bodnar Istvan Aristotle s Natural Philosophy in The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2012 Edition ed Edward N Zalta Gindikin S G 1988 Tales of Physicists and Mathematicians Birkh p 29 ISBN 9780817633172 LCCN 87024971 Lindberg D 2008 The beginnings of western science The European scientific tradition in philosophical religious and institutional context prehistory to AD 1450 2nd ed University of Chicago Press Lang Helen S The Order of Nature in Aristotle s Physics Place and the Elements 1998 Tully Shaya Karachentsev Courtois Kocevski Rizzi Peel 2008 Our Peculiar Motion Away From the Local Void The Astrophysical Journal 676 1 184 205 arXiv 0705 4139 Bibcode 2008ApJ 676 184T doi 10 1086 527428 S2CID 14738309 Aristotle Physics 194 b17 20 see also Posterior Analytics 71 b9 11 94 a20 a b Four Causes Falcon Andrea Aristotle on Causality Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2008 Aristotle Book 5 section 1013a Metaphysics Hugh Tredennick trans Aristotle in 23 Volumes Vols 17 18 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1933 1989 hosted at perseus tufts edu Aristotle also discusses the four causes in his Physics Book B chapter 3 a b Hankinson R J The Theory of the Physics Blackwell Companion to Aristotle p 216 a b Hankinson R J Causes Blackwell Companion to Aristotle p 217 Aristotle Parts of Animals I 1 Hankinson R J Causes Blackwell Companion to Aristotle p 218 a b Henry Devin M 2009 Generation of Animals Blackwell Companion to Aristotle p 368 Hankinson R J Causes Blackwell Companion to Aristotle p 222 a b Caston Victor 2009 Phantasia and Thought Blackwell Companion to Aristotle pp 322 2233 Aydin Sayili 1987 Ibn Sina and Buridan on the Motion of the Projectile Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 500 1 477 482 477 Duhem Pierre 1908 1969 To Save the Phenomena An Essay on the Idea of Physical theory from Plato to Galileo University of Chicago Press Chicago p 28 Rafik Berjak and Muzaffar Iqbal Ibn Sina Al Biruni correspondence Islam amp Science June 2003 Shlomo Pines 1970 Abu l Barakat al Baghdadi Hibat Allah Dictionary of Scientific Biography Vol 1 New York Charles Scribner s Sons pp 26 28 ISBN 0 684 10114 9 cf Abel B Franco October 2003 Avempace Projectile Motion and Impetus Theory Journal of the History of Ideas 64 4 pp 521 546 528 A C Crombie Augustine to Galileo 2 p 67 Aydin Sayili 1987 Ibn Sina and Buridan on the Motion of the Projectile Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 500 1 477 482 Gutman Oliver 2003 Pseudo Avicenna Liber Celi Et Mundi A Critical Edition Brill Publishers p 193 ISBN 90 04 13228 7 Ragep amp Al Qushji 2001 pp 63 4 Ragep 2001 pp 152 3 a b Galileo Galilei Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems a b Galileo Galilei Two New Sciences Apollo 15 Hammer Feather Drop a b Rovelli Carlo 2013 Aristotle s Physics A Physicist s Look Journal of the American Philosophical Association 1 1 23 40 arXiv 1312 4057 doi 10 1017 apa 2014 11 S2CID 44193681 Sources editH Carteron 1965 Does Aristotle Have a Mechanics in Articles on Aristotle 1 Science eds Jonathan Barnes Malcolm Schofield Richard Sorabji London General Duckworth and Company Limited 161 174 Ragep F Jamil 2001 Tusi and Copernicus The Earth s Motion in Context Science in Context Cambridge University Press 14 1 2 145 163 doi 10 1017 s0269889701000060 S2CID 145372613 Ragep F Jamil Al Qushji Ali 2001 Freeing Astronomy from Philosophy An Aspect of Islamic Influence on Science Osiris 2nd Series 16 Science in Theistic Contexts Cognitive Dimensions 49 64 and 66 71 Bibcode 2001Osir 16 49R doi 10 1086 649338 S2CID 142586786 Further reading editKatalin Martinas Aristotelian Thermodynamics in Thermodynamics history and philosophy facts trends debates Veszprem Hungary 23 28 July 1990 pp 285 303 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aristotelian physics amp oldid 1190576743, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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