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Potentiality and actuality

In philosophy, potentiality and actuality[1] are a pair of closely connected principles which Aristotle used to analyze motion, causality, ethics, and physiology in his Physics, Metaphysics, Nicomachean Ethics, and De Anima.[2]

The concept of potentiality, in this context, generally refers to any "possibility" that a thing can be said to have. Aristotle did not consider all possibilities the same, and emphasized the importance of those that become real of their own accord when conditions are right and nothing stops them.[3] Actuality, in contrast to potentiality, is the motion, change or activity that represents an exercise or fulfillment of a possibility, when a possibility becomes real in the fullest sense.[4]

These concepts, in modified forms, remained very important into the Middle Ages, influencing the development of medieval theology in several ways. In modern times the dichotomy has gradually lost importance, as understandings of nature and deity have changed. However the terminology has also been adapted to new uses, as is most obvious in words like energy and dynamic. These were words first used in modern physics by the German scientist and philosopher, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Aristotle's concept of entelechy retains influence on recent concepts of biological "entelechy".

Potentiality Edit

"Potentiality" and "potency" are translations of the Ancient Greek word dunamis (δύναμις). They refer especially to the way the word is used by Aristotle, as a concept contrasting with "actuality". The Latin translation of dunamis is potentia, which is the root of the English word "potential"; it is also sometimes used in English-language philosophical texts. In early modern philosophy, English authors like Hobbes and Locke used the English word power as their translation of Latin potentia.[5]

Dunamis is an ordinary Greek word for possibility or capability. Depending on context, it could be translated 'potency', 'potential', 'capacity', 'ability', 'power', 'capability', 'strength', 'possibility', 'force' and is the root of modern English words dynamic, dynamite, and dynamo.[6]

In his philosophy, Aristotle distinguished two meanings of the word dunamis. According to his understanding of nature there was both a weak sense of potential, meaning simply that something "might chance to happen or not to happen", and a stronger sense, to indicate how something could be done well. For example, "sometimes we say that those who can merely take a walk, or speak, without doing it as well as they intended, cannot speak or walk". This stronger sense is mainly said of the potentials of living things, although it is also sometimes used for things like musical instruments.[7]

Throughout his works, Aristotle clearly distinguishes things that are stable or persistent, with their own strong natural tendency to a specific type of change, from things that appear to occur by chance. He treats these as having a different and more real existence. "Natures which persist" are said by him to be one of the causes of all things, while natures that do not persist, "might often be slandered as not being at all by one who fixes his thinking sternly upon it as upon a criminal". The potencies which persist in a particular material are one way of describing "the nature itself" of that material, an innate source of motion and rest within that material. In terms of Aristotle's theory of four causes, a material's non-accidental potential is the material cause of the things that can come to be from that material, and one part of how we can understand the substance (ousia, sometimes translated as "thinghood") of any separate thing. (As emphasized by Aristotle, this requires his distinction between accidental causes and natural causes.)[8] According to Aristotle, when we refer to the nature of a thing, we are referring to the form, shape or look of a thing, which was already present as a potential, an innate tendency to change, in that material before it achieved that form. When things are most "fully at work" we can see more fully what kind of thing they really are.[9]

Actuality Edit

Actuality is often used to translate both energeia (ἐνέργεια) and entelecheia (ἐντελέχεια) (sometimes rendered in English as entelechy). Actuality comes from Latin actualitas and is a traditional translation, but its normal meaning in Latin is 'anything which is currently happening'.

The two words energeia and entelecheia were coined by Aristotle, and he stated that their meanings were intended to converge.[10] In practice, most commentators and translators consider the two words to be interchangeable.[11][12] They both refer to something being in its own type of action or at work, as all things are when they are real in the fullest sense, and not just potentially real. For example, "to be a rock is to strain to be at the center of the universe, and thus to be in motion unless constrained otherwise".[2]

Energeia Edit

Energeia is a word based upon ἔργον (ergon), meaning 'work'.[11][13] It is the source of the modern word energy but the term has evolved so much over the course of the history of science that reference to the modern term is not very helpful in understanding the original as used by Aristotle. It is difficult to translate his use of energeia into English with consistency. Joe Sachs renders it with the phrase "being–at–work" and says that "we might construct the word is-at-work-ness from Anglo-Saxon roots to translate energeia into English".[14]

Aristotle says the word can be made clear by looking at examples rather than trying to find a definition.[15] Two examples of energeiai in Aristotle's works are pleasure and happiness (eudaimonia). Pleasure is an energeia of the human body and mind whereas happiness is more simply the energeia of a human being a human.[16]

Kinesis, translated as movement, motion, or in some contexts change, is also explained by Aristotle as a particular type of energeia. See below.

Entelechy (entelechia) Edit

Entelechy, in Greek entelécheia, was coined by Aristotle and transliterated in Latin as entelechia. According to Sachs (1995, p. 245):

Aristotle invents the word by combining entelēs (ἐντελής, 'complete, full-grown') with echein (= hexis, to be a certain way by the continuing effort of holding on in that condition), while at the same time punning on endelecheia (ἐνδελέχεια, 'persistence') by inserting telos (τέλος, 'completion'). This is a three-ring circus of a word, at the heart of everything in Aristotle's thinking, including the definition of motion.

Sachs therefore proposed a complex neologism of his own, "being-at-work-staying-the-same".[17] Another translation in recent years is "being-at-an-end" (which Sachs has also used).[2]

Entelecheia, as can be seen by its derivation, is a kind of completeness, whereas "the end and completion of any genuine being is its being-at-work" (energeia). The entelecheia is a continuous being-at-work (energeia) when something is doing its complete "work". For this reason, the meanings of the two words converge, and they both depend upon the idea that every thing's "thinghood" is a kind of work, or in other words a specific way of being in motion. All things that exist now, and not just potentially, are beings-at-work, and all of them have a tendency towards being-at-work in a particular way that would be their proper and "complete" way.[17]

Sachs explains the convergence of energeia and entelecheia as follows, and uses the word actuality to describe the overlap between them:[2]

Just as energeia extends to entelecheia because it is the activity which makes a thing what it is, entelecheia extends to energeia because it is the end or perfection which has being only in, through, and during activity.

Motion Edit

Aristotle discusses motion (kinēsis) in his Physics quite differently from modern science. Aristotle's definition of motion is closely connected to his actuality-potentiality distinction. Taken literally, Aristotle defines motion as the actuality (entelecheia) of a "potentiality as such".[18] What Aristotle meant however is the subject of several different interpretations. A major difficulty comes from the fact that the terms actuality and potentiality, linked in this definition, are normally understood within Aristotle as opposed to each other. On the other hand, the "as such" is important and is explained at length by Aristotle, giving examples of "potentiality as such". For example, the motion of building is the energeia of the dunamis of the building materials as building materials as opposed to anything else they might become, and this potential in the unbuilt materials is referred to by Aristotle as "the buildable". So the motion of building is the actualization of "the buildable" and not the actualization of a house as such, nor the actualization of any other possibility which the building materials might have had.[19]

Building materials have different potentials.
One is that they can be built with.
Building is one motion that had been a potential in the building material.
So it is the energeia or putting into action, of the building materials as building materials.
A house is built, and no longer moving.

In an influential 1969 paper, Aryeh Kosman divided up previous attempts to explain Aristotle's definition into two types, criticised them, and then gave his own third interpretation. While this has not become a consensus, it has been described as having become "orthodox".[20] This and similar more recent publications are the basis of the following summary.

1. The "process" interpretation Edit

Kosman (1969) and Coope (2009) associate this approach with W.D. Ross. Sachs (2005) points out that it was also the interpretation of Averroes and Maimonides.

This interpretation is, to use the words of Ross that "it is the passage to actuality that is kinesis” as opposed to any potentiality being an actuality.[21]

The argument of Ross for this interpretation requires him to assert that Aristotle actually used his own word entelecheia wrongly, or inconsistently, only within his definition, making it mean "actualization", which is in conflict with Aristotle's normal use of words. According to Sachs (2005) this explanation also can not account for the "as such" in Aristotle's definition.

2. The "product" interpretation Edit

Sachs (2005) associates this interpretation with St Thomas of Aquinas and explains that by this explanation "the apparent contradiction between potentiality and actuality in Aristotle's definition of motion" is resolved "by arguing that in every motion actuality and potentiality are mixed or blended". Motion is therefore "the actuality of any potentiality insofar as it is still a potentiality". Or in other words:

The Thomistic blend of actuality and potentiality has the characteristic that, to the extent that it is actual it is not potential and to the extent that it is potential it is not actual; the hotter the water is, the less is it potentially hot, and the cooler it is, the less is it actually, the more potentially, hot.

As with the first interpretation however, Sachs (2005) objects that:

One implication of this interpretation is that whatever happens to be the case right now is an entelechia, as though something that is intrinsically unstable as the instantaneous position of an arrow in flight deserved to be described by the word that everywhere else Aristotle reserves for complex organized states that persist, that hold out against internal and external causes that try to destroy them.

In a more recent paper on this subject, Kosman associates the view of Aquinas with those of his own critics, David Charles, Jonathan Beere, and Robert Heineman.[22]

3. The interpretation of Kosman, Coope, Sachs and others Edit

Sachs (2005), amongst other authors (such as Aryeh Kosman and Ursula Coope), proposes that the solution to problems interpreting Aristotle's definition must be found in the distinction Aristotle makes between two different types of potentiality, with only one of those corresponding to the "potentiality as such" appearing in the definition of motion. He writes:

The man with sight, but with his eyes closed, differs from the blind man, although neither is seeing. The first man has the capacity to see, which the second man lacks. There are then potentialities as well as actualities in the world. But when the first man opens his eyes, has he lost the capacity to see? Obviously not; while he is seeing, his capacity to see is no longer merely a potentiality, but is a potentiality which has been put to work. The potentiality to see exists sometimes as active or at-work, and sometimes as inactive or latent.

Coming to motion, Sachs gives the example of a man walking across the room and says that...

  • "Once he has reached the other side of the room, his potentiality to be there has been actualized in Ross’ sense of the term". This is a type of energeia. However, it is not a motion, and not relevant to the definition of motion.
  • While a man is walking his potentiality to be on the other side of the room is actual just as a potentiality, or in other words the potential as such is an actuality. "The actuality of the potentiality to be on the other side of the room, as just that potentiality, is neither more nor less than the walking across the room."

Sachs (1995, pp. 78–79), in his commentary of Aristotle's Physics book III gives the following results from his understanding of Aristotle's definition of motion:

The genus of which motion is a species is being-at-work-staying-itself (entelecheia), of which the only other species is thinghood. The being-at-work-staying-itself of a potency (dunamis), as material, is thinghood. The being-at-work-staying-the-same of a potency as a potency is motion.

The importance of actuality in Aristotle's philosophy Edit

The actuality-potentiality distinction in Aristotle is a key element linked to everything in his physics and metaphysics.[23]

 
A marble block in Carrara. Could there be a particular sculpture already existing in it as a potentiality? Aristotle wrote approvingly of such ways of talking, and felt it reflected a type of causation in nature which is often ignored in scientific discussion.

Aristotle describes potentiality and actuality, or potency and action, as one of several distinctions between things that exist or do not exist. In a sense, a thing that exists potentially does not exist; but, the potential does exist. And this type of distinction is expressed for several different types of being within Aristotle's categories of being. For example, from Aristotle's Metaphysics, 1017a:[24]

  • We speak of an entity being a "seeing" thing whether it is currently seeing or just able to see.
  • We speak of someone having understanding, whether they are using that understanding or not.
  • We speak of corn existing in a field even when it is not yet ripe.
  • People sometimes speak of a figure being already present in a rock which could be sculpted to represent that figure.

Within the works of Aristotle the terms energeia and entelecheia, often translated as actuality, differ from what is merely actual because they specifically presuppose that all things have a proper kind of activity or work which, if achieved, would be their proper end. Greek for end in this sense is telos, a component word in entelecheia (a work that is the proper end of a thing) and also teleology. This is an aspect of Aristotle's theory of four causes and specifically of formal cause (eidos, which Aristotle says is energeia[25]) and final cause (telos).

In essence this means that Aristotle did not see things as matter in motion only, but also proposed that all things have their own aims or ends. In other words, for Aristotle (unlike modern science), there is a distinction between things with a natural cause in the strongest sense, and things that truly happen by accident. He also distinguishes non-rational from rational potentialities (e.g. the capacity to heat and the capacity to play the flute, respectively), pointing out that the latter require desire or deliberate choice for their actualization.[26] Because of this style of reasoning, Aristotle is often referred to as having a teleology, and sometimes as having a theory of forms.

While actuality is linked by Aristotle to his concept of a formal cause, potentiality (or potency) on the other hand, is linked by Aristotle to his concepts of hylomorphic matter and material cause. Aristotle wrote for example that "matter exists potentially, because it may attain to the form; but when it exists actually, it is then in the form".[27]

Teleology is a crucial concept throughout Aristotle's philosophy.[28] This means that as well as its central role in his physics and metaphysics, the potentiality-actuality distinction has a significant influence on other areas of Aristotle's thought such as his ethics, biology and psychology.[29]

The active intellect Edit

The active intellect was a concept Aristotle described that requires an understanding of the actuality-potentiality dichotomy. Aristotle described this in his De Anima (book 3, ch. 5, 430a10-25) and covered similar ground in his Metaphysics (book 12, ch.7-10). The following is from the De Anima, translated by Joe Sachs,[30] with some parenthetic notes about the Greek. The passage tries to explain "how the human intellect passes from its original state, in which it does not think, to a subsequent state, in which it does." He inferred that the energeia/dunamis distinction must also exist in the soul itself:[31]

...since in nature one thing is the material [hulē] for each kind [genos] (this is what is in potency all the particular things of that kind) but it is something else that is the causal and productive thing by which all of them are formed, as is the case with an art in relation to its material, it is necessary in the soul [psuchē] too that these distinct aspects be present;

the one sort is intellect [nous] by becoming all things, the other sort by forming all things, in the way an active condition [hexis] like light too makes the colors that are in potency be at work as colors [to phōs poiei ta dunamei onta chrōmata energeiai chrōmata].

This sort of intellect is separate, as well as being without attributes and unmixed, since it is by its thinghood a being-at-work, for what acts is always distinguished in stature above what is acted upon, as a governing source is above the material it works on.

Knowledge [epistēmē], in its being-at-work, is the same as the thing it knows, and while knowledge in potency comes first in time in any one knower, in the whole of things it does not take precedence even in time.

This does not mean that at one time it thinks but at another time it does not think, but when separated it is just exactly what it is, and this alone is deathless and everlasting (though we have no memory, because this sort of intellect is not acted upon, while the sort that is acted upon is destructible), and without this nothing thinks.

This has been referred to as one of "the most intensely studied sentences in the history of philosophy".[31] In the Metaphysics, Aristotle wrote at more length on a similar subject and is often understood to have equated the active intellect with being the "unmoved mover" and God. Nevertheless, as Davidson remarks:

Just what Aristotle meant by potential intellect and active intellect – terms not even explicit in the De anima and at best implied – and just how he understood the interaction between them remains moot to this day. Students of the history of philosophy continue to debate Aristotle's intent, particularly the question whether he considered the active intellect to be an aspect of the human soul or an entity existing independently of man.[31]

Post-Aristotelian usage Edit

New meanings of energeia or energy Edit

Already in Aristotle's own works, the concept of a distinction between energeia and dunamis was used in many ways, for example to describe the way striking metaphors work,[32] or human happiness. Polybius about 150 BC, in his work the Histories uses Aristotle's word energeia in both an Aristotelian way and also to describe the "clarity and vividness" of things.[33] Diodorus Siculus in 60-30 BC used the term in a very similar way to Polybius. However, Diodorus uses the term to denote qualities unique to individuals. Using the term in ways that could translated as 'vigor' or 'energy' (in a more modern sense); for society, 'practice' or 'custom'; for a thing, 'operation' or 'working'; like vigor in action.[34]

Platonism and neoplatonism Edit

Already in Plato it is found implicitly the notion of potency and act in his cosmological presentation of becoming (kinēsis) and forces (dunamis),[35] linked to the ordering intellect, mainly in the description of the Demiurge and the "Receptacle" in his Timaeus.[36][37] It has also been associated to the dyad of Plato's unwritten doctrines,[38] and is involved in the question of being and non-being since from the pre-socratics,[39] as in Heraclitus's mobilism and Parmenides' immobilism. The mythological concept of primordial Chaos is also classically associated with a disordered prime matter (see also prima materia), which, being passive and full of potentialities, would be ordered in actual forms, as can be seen in Neoplatonism, especially in Plutarch, Plotinus, and among the Church Fathers,[39] and the subsequent medieval and Renaissance philosophy, as in Ramon Lllull's Book of Chaos[40] and John Milton's Paradise Lost.[41]

Plotinus was a late classical pagan philosopher and theologian whose monotheistic re-workings of Plato and Aristotle were influential amongst early Christian theologians. In his Enneads he sought to reconcile ideas of Aristotle and Plato together with a form of monotheism, that used three fundamental metaphysical principles, which were conceived of in terms consistent with Aristotle's energeia/dunamis dichotomy, and one interpretation of his concept of the Active Intellect (discussed above):-

  • The Monad or "the One" sometimes also described as "the Good". This is the dunamis or possibility of existence.
  • The Intellect, or Intelligence, or, to use the Greek term, Nous, which is described as God, or a Demiurge. It thinks its own contents, which are thoughts, equated to the Platonic ideas or forms (eide). The thinking of this Intellect is the highest activity of life. The actualization of this thinking is the being of the forms. This Intellect is the first principle or foundation of existence. The One is prior to it, but not in the sense that a normal cause is prior to an effect, but instead Intellect is called an emanation of the One. The One is the possibility of this foundation of existence.
  • Soul or, to use the Greek term, psyche. The soul is also an energeia: it acts upon or actualizes its own thoughts and creates "a separate, material cosmos that is the living image of the spiritual or noetic Cosmos contained as a unified thought within the Intelligence".

This was based largely upon Plotinus' reading of Plato, but also incorporated many Aristotelian concepts, including the unmoved mover as energeia.[42]

New Testament usage Edit

Other than incorporation of Neoplatonic into Christendom by early Christian theologians such as St. Augustine, the concepts of dunamis and ergon (the morphological root of energeia[43]) are frequently used in the original Greek New Testament.[44] Dunamis is used 119 times[45] and ergon is used 161 times,[46] usually with the meaning 'power/ability' and 'act/work', respectively.

Essence-energies debate in medieval Christian theology Edit

In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, St Gregory Palamas wrote about the "energies" (actualities; singular energeia in Greek, or actus in Latin) of God in contrast to God's "essence" (ousia). These are two distinct types of existence, with God's energy being the type of existence which people can perceive, while the essence of God is outside of normal existence or non-existence or human understanding, i.e. transcendental, in that it is not caused or created by anything else.

Palamas gave this explanation as part of his defense of the Eastern Orthodox ascetic practice of hesychasm. Palamism became a standard part of Orthodox dogma after 1351.[47]

In contrast, the position of Western Medieval (or Catholic) Christianity, can be found for example in the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas, who relied on Aristotle's concept of entelechy, when he defined God as actus purus, pure act, actuality unmixed with potentiality. The existence of a truly distinct essence of God which is not actuality, is not generally accepted in Catholic theology.

Influence on modal logic Edit

The notion of possibility was greatly analyzed by medieval and modern philosophers. Aristotle's logical work in this area is considered by some to be an anticipation of modal logic and its treatment of potentiality and time. Indeed, many philosophical interpretations of possibility are related to a famous passage on Aristotle's On Interpretation, concerning the truth of the statement: "There will be a sea battle tomorrow".[48]

Contemporary philosophy regards possibility, as studied by modal metaphysics, to be an aspect of modal logic. Modal logic as a named subject owes much to the writings of the Scholastics, in particular William of Ockham and John Duns Scotus, who reasoned informally in a modal manner, mainly to analyze statements about essence and accident.

Influence on early modern physics Edit

Aristotle's metaphysics, his account of nature and causality, was for the most part rejected by the early modern philosophers. Francis Bacon in his Novum Organon in one explanation of the case for rejecting the concept of a formal cause or "nature" for each type of thing, argued for example that philosophers must still look for formal causes but only in the sense of "simple natures" such as colour, and weight, which exist in many gradations and modes in very different types of individual bodies.[49] In the works of Thomas Hobbes then, the traditional Aristotelian terms, "potentia et actus", are discussed, but he equates them simply to "cause and effect".[50]

 
Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, the source of the modern adaptations of Aristotle's concepts of potentiality and actuality.

There was an adaptation of at least one aspect of Aristotle's potentiality and actuality distinction, which has become part of modern physics, although as per Bacon's approach it is a generalized form of energy, not one connected to specific forms for specific things. The definition of energy in modern physics as the product of mass and the square of velocity, was derived by Leibniz, as a correction of Descartes, based upon Galileo's investigation of falling bodies. He preferred to refer to it as an entelecheia or 'living force' (Latin vis viva), but what he defined is today called kinetic energy, and was seen by Leibniz as a modification of Aristotle's energeia, and his concept of the potential for movement which is in things. Instead of each type of physical thing having its own specific tendency to a way of moving or changing, as in Aristotle, Leibniz said that instead, force, power, or motion itself could be transferred between things of different types, in such a way that there is a general conservation of this energy. In other words, Leibniz's modern version of entelechy or energy obeys its own laws of nature, whereas different types of things do not have their own separate laws of nature.[51] Leibniz wrote:[52]

...the entelechy of Aristotle, which has made so much noise, is nothing else but force or activity ; that is, a state from which action naturally flows if nothing hinders it. But matter, primary and pure, taken without the souls or lives which are united to it, is purely passive ; properly speaking also it is not a substance, but something incomplete.

Leibniz's study of the "entelechy" now known as energy was a part of what he called his new science of "dynamics", based on the Greek word dunamis and his understanding that he was making a modern version of Aristotle's old dichotomy. He also referred to it as the "new science of power and action", (Latin potentia et effectu and potentia et actione). And it is from him that the modern distinction between statics and dynamics in physics stems. The emphasis on dunamis in the name of this new science comes from the importance of his discovery of potential energy which is not active, but which conserves energy nevertheless. "As 'a science of power and action', dynamics arises when Leibniz proposes an adequate architectonic of laws for constrained, as well as unconstrained, motions."[53]

For Leibniz, like Aristotle, this law of nature concerning entelechies was also understood as a metaphysical law, important not only for physics, but also for understanding life and the soul. A soul, or spirit, according to Leibniz, can be understood as a type of entelechy (or living monad) which has distinct perceptions and memory.

Influence on modern physics Edit

Ideas about potentiality have been related to quantum mechanics, where a wave function in a superposition of potential values (before measurement) has the potential to collapse into one of those values, under the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics. In particular, the German physicist Werner Heisenberg called this "a quantitative version of the old concept of ‘potentia’ in Aristotelian philosophy".[54][55]

Entelecheia in modern philosophy and biology Edit

As discussed above, terms derived from dunamis and energeia have become parts of modern scientific vocabulary with a very different meaning from Aristotle's. The original meanings are not used by modern philosophers unless they are commenting on classical or medieval philosophy. In contrast, entelecheia, in the form of entelechy is a word used much less in technical senses in recent times.

As mentioned above, the concept had occupied a central position in the metaphysics of Leibniz, and is closely related to his monad in the sense that each sentient entity contains its own entire universe within it. But Leibniz' use of this concept influenced more than just the development of the vocabulary of modern physics. Leibniz was also one of the main inspirations for the important movement in philosophy known as German Idealism, and within this movement and schools influenced by it entelechy may denote a force propelling one to self-fulfillment.

In the biological vitalism of Hans Driesch, living things develop by entelechy, a common purposive and organising field. Leading vitalists like Driesch argued that many of the basic problems of biology cannot be solved by a philosophy in which the organism is simply considered a machine.[56] Vitalism and its concepts like entelechy have since been discarded as without value for scientific practice by the overwhelming majority of professional biologists.[citation needed]

However, in philosophy aspects and applications of the concept of entelechy have been explored by scientifically interested philosophers and philosophically inclined scientists alike. One example was the American critic and philosopher Kenneth Burke (1897–1993) whose concept of the "terministic screens" illustrates his thought on the subject.

Prof Denis Noble argues that, just as teleological causation is necessary to the social sciences, a specific teleological causation in biology, expressing functional purpose, should be restored and that it is already implicit in neo-Darwinism (e.g. "selfish gene"). Teleological analysis proves parsimonious when the level of analysis is appropriate to the complexity of the required 'level' of explanation (e.g. whole body or organ rather than cell mechanism).[57]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ dynamis–energeia, translated into Latin as potentia–actualitas (earlier also possibilitas–efficacia). Giorgio Agamben, Opus Dei: An Archaeology of Duty (2013), p. 46.
  2. ^ a b c d Sachs (2005)
  3. ^ Sachs (1999, p. lvii).
  4. ^ Durrant (1993, p. 206)
  5. ^ Locke (1689, chpt. XXI)
  6. ^ See Perseus dictionary references for dunamis.
  7. ^ Metaphysics 1019a - 1019b. The translations used are those of Tredennick on the Perseus project.
  8. ^ From Physics 192a18. Translation from Sachs (1995, p. 45)
  9. ^ Physics 193b. (Sachs (1995, p. 51).)
  10. ^ Metaphysics 1047a30, in the Sachs (1999) translation: "the phrase being-at-work, which is designed to converge in meaning with being-at-work-staying-complete". Greek is: ἐλήλυθε δ᾽ ἡ ἐνέργεια τοὔνομα, ἡ πρὸς τὴν ἐντελέχειαν συντιθεμένη
  11. ^ a b Bradshaw (2004) page 13
  12. ^ Durrant (1993, p. 201)
  13. ^ Metaphysics 1050a21-23. In Tredinnick's translation: "For the activity is the end, and the actuality (energeia) is the activity (ergon); hence the term "actuality" is derived from "activity," and tends to have the meaning of "complete reality (entelecheia)." Greek: τὸ γὰρ ἔργον τέλος, ἡ δὲ ἐνέργεια τὸ ἔργον, διὸ καὶ τοὔνομα ἐνέργεια λέγεται κατὰ τὸ ἔργον καὶ συντείνει πρὸς τὴν ἐντελέχειαν.
  14. ^ Sachs (1995), Sachs (1999), Sachs (2005)
  15. ^ Metaphysics 1048a30ff.
  16. ^ Nicomachean Ethics, Book X. Chapters 1–5.
  17. ^ a b Sachs (1995)
  18. ^ Physics 201a10-11, 201a27-29, 201b4-5. Metaphysics Book VII.
  19. ^ Metaphysics Book XI, 1066a.
  20. ^ Trifogli, Cecilia (2000), Oxford Physics in the Thirteenth Century (ca. 1250-1270): Motion, Infinity, Place & Time, Brill, p. 8, ISBN 9004116575
  21. ^ Physics, text with commentary, London, 1936, p. 359, quoted by Sachs (2005).
  22. ^ Kosman (2013), chapter 2, footnote 19.
  23. ^ Sachs (1995:245).
  24. ^ Tredennick's translation, with links to his footnote cross references, using the Perseus online resources: "For we say that both that which sees potentially and that which sees actually is "a seeing thing." And in the same way we call "understanding" both that which can use the understanding, and that which does ; and we call "tranquil" both that in which tranquillity is already present, and that which is potentially tranquil. Similarly too in the case of substances. For we say that Hermes is in the stone, (Cf. Aristotle Met. 3.5.6.) and the half of the line in the whole; and we call "corn" what is not yet ripe. But when a thing is potentially existent and when not, must be defined elsewhere." Aristotle Metaphysics 9.9.
  25. ^ Metaphysics 1050b. Greek: ὥστε φανερὸν ὅτι ἡ οὐσία καὶ τὸ εἶδος ἐνέργειά ἐστιν.
  26. ^ Metaphysics 1048a. The Greek words are orexis for desire and proairesis for deliberate choice.
  27. ^ Metaphysics 1050a15. Greek: ἔτι ἡ ὕλη ἔστι δυνάμει ὅτι ἔλθοι ἂν εἰς τὸ εἶδος: ὅταν δέ γε ἐνεργείᾳ ᾖ, τότε ἐν τῷ εἴδει ἐστίν
  28. ^ Johnson, Monte Ransome (2008). Aristotle on teleology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199238507.
  29. ^ Willows, Adam M. (April 2022). "Good, Actually: Aristotelian Metaphysics and the 'Guise of the Good'" (PDF). Philosophy. 97 (2): 187–205. doi:10.1017/S0031819121000425. S2CID 246525266.
  30. ^ Sachs (2001)
  31. ^ a b c Davidson (1992, p. 3)
  32. ^ Rhetoric 1411b
  33. ^ Bradshaw (2004, p. 51)
  34. ^ Bradshaw (2004, p. 55)
  35. ^ Cleary, John J. (1998). «'Powers that Be': The Concept of Potency in Plato and Aristotle». Méthexis. XI
  36. ^ Brisson, Luc (January 1, 2016). «The Intellect and the cosmos». Méthodos (16). ISSN 1626-0600. doi:10.4000/methodos.4463
  37. ^ Claghorn, George S. (1954). Aristotle's Criticism of the Receptacle. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands. pp. 5–19. doi:10.1007/978-94-011-8839-5_2. ISBN 9789401181907.
  38. ^ Turner, John Douglas (2001). Sethian Gnosticism and the Platonic Tradition (em inglês). [S.l.]: Presses Université Laval. ISBN 9782763778341. p. 329
  39. ^ a b Dillon, Jonh. Plutarch as a Polemicist.
  40. ^ "Potentiality and Act in Chaos". lullianarts.narpan.net. Retrieved 2019-09-13.
  41. ^ Chambers, A. B. (1998). "Chaos in Paradise Lost". Méthexis. XI (1): 55–84. doi:10.2307/2707859. JSTOR 2707859.
  42. ^ See Moore, Edward, "Plotinus", Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Gerson, Lloyd (2018), "Plotinus", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. The direct quote above comes from Moore.
  43. ^ https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E1%BC%94%CF%81%CE%B3%CE%BF%CE%BD#Ancient_Greek[user-generated source]
  44. ^ "Vocabulary Frequency List". 15 April 2017.
  45. ^ "Dunamis Meaning in the Bible - New Testament Greek Lexicon (NAS)".
  46. ^ "Ergon Meaning in Bible - New Testament Greek Lexicon - King James Version".
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2010-12-27.
  48. ^ See copy of W.D. Ross's translation scanned on Internet Archive.
  49. ^ Book II, aphorism V
  50. ^ De Corpore chapter X (in Latin; in English).
  51. ^ Klein (1985), and Sachs (2005): "Leibniz, who criticized Descartes’ physics and invented a science of dynamics, explicitly acknowledged his debt to Aristotle (see, e.g., Specimen Dynamicum), whose doctrine of entelecheia he regarded himself as restoring in a modified form. From Leibniz we derive our current notions of potential and kinetic energy, whose very names, pointing to the actuality which is potential and the actuality which is motion, preserve the Thomistic resolutions of the two paradoxes in Aristotle's definition of motion."
  52. ^ Leibniz (1890, p. 234)
  53. ^ Duchesneau (1998)
  54. ^ See Jaeger
  55. ^ Kistler, Max (2018), Engelhard, Kristina; Quante, Michael (eds.), "Potentiality in Physics", Handbook of Potentiality, Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, pp. 353–374, doi:10.1007/978-94-024-1287-1_14, ISBN 978-94-024-1287-1, S2CID 125452936, retrieved 2023-02-24
  56. ^ Mayr (2002)
  57. ^ Noble, D. (2016). Dance to the tune of life: Biological relativity. Cambridge University Press. pp 53, 198, 210, 277.

Bibliography Edit

  • Aristotle (1999), Aristotle's Metaphysics, a new translation by Joe Sachs, Santa Fe, NM: Green Lion Books, ISBN 1-888009-03-9
  • Beere, Jonathan (1990), Doing and Being: An interpretation of Aristotle's Metaphysics Theta, Oxford
  • Bradshaw, David (2004). Aristotle East and West: Metaphysics and the Division of Christendom. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-82865-9.
  • Charles, David (1984), Aristotle's Philosophy of Action, Duckworth
  • Coope, Ursula (2009), "Change and its Relation to Actuality and Potentiality", in Anagnostopoulos, Georgios (ed.), A Companion to Aristotle, Blackwell, p. 277, ISBN 9781444305678
  • Davidson, Herbert (1992), Alfarabi, Avicenna, and Averroes, on Intellect, Oxford University Press
  • Duchesneau, François (1998), "Leibniz's Theoretical Shift in the Phoranomus and Dynamica de Potentia", Perspectives on Science, 6 (1&2): 77–109, doi:10.1162/posc_a_00545, S2CID 141935224
  • Durrant, Michael (1993). Aristotle's De Anima in Focus. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-0-415-05340-2.
  • Jaeger, Gregg (2017), "Quantum potentiality revisited", Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A, 375 (2106): 20160390, Bibcode:2017RSPTA.37560390J, doi:10.1098/rsta.2016.0390, PMID 28971942
  • Klein, Jacob (1985), "Leibnitz, an Introduction", Lectures and Essays, St Johns College Press
  • Kosman, Aryeh (1969), "Aristotle's Definition of Motion", Phronesis, 14 (1): 40–62, doi:10.1163/156852869x00037
  • Kosman, Aryeh (2013), The Activity of Being: an Essay on Aristotle's Ontology, Harvard University Press
  • Heinaman, Robert (1994), "Is Aristotle's definition of motion circular?", Apeiron (27), doi:10.1515/APEIRON.1994.27.1.25, S2CID 171013812
  • Leibniz, Gottfried (1890) [1715], "On the Doctrine of Malebranche. A Letter to M. Remond de Montmort, containing Remarks on the Book of Father Tertre against Father Malebranche", The Philosophical Works of Leibnitz, p. 234
  • Locke, John (1689). "Book II Chapter XXI "Of Power"". An Essay concerning Human Understanding and Other Writings, Part 2. The Works of John Locke in Nine Volumes. Vol. 2. Rivington.
  • Mayr, Ernst (2002). The Walter Arndt Lecture: The Autonomy of Biology.
  • Sachs, Joe (1995), Aristotle's Physics: a Guided Study, Rutgers University Press
  • Sachs, Joe (1999), Aristotle's Metaphysics, a New Translation by Joe Sachs, Santa Fe, NM: Green Lion Books, ISBN 1-888009-03-9
  • Sachs, Joe (2001), Aristotle's On the Soul and On Memory and Recollection, Green Lion Books
  • Sachs, Joe (2005), "Aristotle: Motion and its Place in Nature", Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Warnock, Mary (1950). "A Note on Aristotle: Categories 6a 15". Mind. New Series (59): 552–554. doi:10.1093/mind/LIX.236.552.

Old translations of Aristotle Edit

  • Aristotle (2009). "The Internet Classics Archive - Aristotle On the Soul, J.A. Smith translator". MIT.
  • Aristotle (2009). "The Internet Classics Archive - Aristotle Categories, E.M. Edghill translator". MIT.
  • Aristotle (2009). "The Internet Classics Archive - Aristotle Physics, R.P. Hardie & Gaye, R.K. translators". MIT.
  • Aristotle (1908). Metaphysica translated by W.D. Ross. The Works of Aristotle. Vol. VIII. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Aristotle (1989). "Metaphysics, Hugh Tredennick trans.". Aristotle in 23 Volumes. Vol. 17, 18. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; (London: William Heinemann Ltd.). This 1933 translation is reproduced online at the Perseus Project.

potentiality, actuality, actuality, redirects, here, film, genre, actuality, film, dunamis, redirects, here, other, uses, dunamis, disambiguation, energeia, redirects, here, other, uses, energia, disambiguation, energy, disambiguation, philosophy, potentiality. Actuality redirects here For the film genre see Actuality film Dunamis redirects here For other uses see Dunamis disambiguation Energeia redirects here For other uses see Energia disambiguation and Energy disambiguation In philosophy potentiality and actuality 1 are a pair of closely connected principles which Aristotle used to analyze motion causality ethics and physiology in his Physics Metaphysics Nicomachean Ethics and De Anima 2 The concept of potentiality in this context generally refers to any possibility that a thing can be said to have Aristotle did not consider all possibilities the same and emphasized the importance of those that become real of their own accord when conditions are right and nothing stops them 3 Actuality in contrast to potentiality is the motion change or activity that represents an exercise or fulfillment of a possibility when a possibility becomes real in the fullest sense 4 These concepts in modified forms remained very important into the Middle Ages influencing the development of medieval theology in several ways In modern times the dichotomy has gradually lost importance as understandings of nature and deity have changed However the terminology has also been adapted to new uses as is most obvious in words like energy and dynamic These were words first used in modern physics by the German scientist and philosopher Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Aristotle s concept of entelechy retains influence on recent concepts of biological entelechy Contents 1 Potentiality 2 Actuality 2 1 Energeia 2 2 Entelechy entelechia 3 Motion 3 1 1 The process interpretation 3 2 2 The product interpretation 3 3 3 The interpretation of Kosman Coope Sachs and others 4 The importance of actuality in Aristotle s philosophy 5 The active intellect 6 Post Aristotelian usage 6 1 New meanings of energeia or energy 6 2 Platonism and neoplatonism 6 3 New Testament usage 6 4 Essence energies debate in medieval Christian theology 6 5 Influence on modal logic 6 6 Influence on early modern physics 6 7 Influence on modern physics 6 8 Entelecheia in modern philosophy and biology 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Old translations of AristotlePotentiality Edit nbsp Look up potentiality potentia or dynamis in Wiktionary the free dictionary Potentiality and potency are translations of the Ancient Greek word dunamis dynamis They refer especially to the way the word is used by Aristotle as a concept contrasting with actuality The Latin translation of dunamis is potentia which is the root of the English word potential it is also sometimes used in English language philosophical texts In early modern philosophy English authors like Hobbes and Locke used the English word power as their translation of Latin potentia 5 Dunamis is an ordinary Greek word for possibility or capability Depending on context it could be translated potency potential capacity ability power capability strength possibility force and is the root of modern English words dynamic dynamite and dynamo 6 In his philosophy Aristotle distinguished two meanings of the word dunamis According to his understanding of nature there was both a weak sense of potential meaning simply that something might chance to happen or not to happen and a stronger sense to indicate how something could be done well For example sometimes we say that those who can merely take a walk or speak without doing it as well as they intended cannot speak or walk This stronger sense is mainly said of the potentials of living things although it is also sometimes used for things like musical instruments 7 Throughout his works Aristotle clearly distinguishes things that are stable or persistent with their own strong natural tendency to a specific type of change from things that appear to occur by chance He treats these as having a different and more real existence Natures which persist are said by him to be one of the causes of all things while natures that do not persist might often be slandered as not being at all by one who fixes his thinking sternly upon it as upon a criminal The potencies which persist in a particular material are one way of describing the nature itself of that material an innate source of motion and rest within that material In terms of Aristotle s theory of four causes a material s non accidental potential is the material cause of the things that can come to be from that material and one part of how we can understand the substance ousia sometimes translated as thinghood of any separate thing As emphasized by Aristotle this requires his distinction between accidental causes and natural causes 8 According to Aristotle when we refer to the nature of a thing we are referring to the form shape or look of a thing which was already present as a potential an innate tendency to change in that material before it achieved that form When things are most fully at work we can see more fully what kind of thing they really are 9 Actuality EditActuality is often used to translate both energeia ἐnergeia and entelecheia ἐntelexeia sometimes rendered in English as entelechy Actuality comes from Latin actualitas and is a traditional translation but its normal meaning in Latin is anything which is currently happening The two words energeia and entelecheia were coined by Aristotle and he stated that their meanings were intended to converge 10 In practice most commentators and translators consider the two words to be interchangeable 11 12 They both refer to something being in its own type of action or at work as all things are when they are real in the fullest sense and not just potentially real For example to be a rock is to strain to be at the center of the universe and thus to be in motion unless constrained otherwise 2 Energeia Edit Energeia is a word based upon ἔrgon ergon meaning work 11 13 It is the source of the modern word energy but the term has evolved so much over the course of the history of science that reference to the modern term is not very helpful in understanding the original as used by Aristotle It is difficult to translate his use of energeia into English with consistency Joe Sachs renders it with the phrase being at work and says that we might construct the word is at work ness from Anglo Saxon roots to translate energeia into English 14 Aristotle says the word can be made clear by looking at examples rather than trying to find a definition 15 Two examples of energeiai in Aristotle s works are pleasure and happiness eudaimonia Pleasure is an energeia of the human body and mind whereas happiness is more simply the energeia of a human being a human 16 Kinesis translated as movement motion or in some contexts change is also explained by Aristotle as a particular type of energeia See below Entelechy entelechia Edit Entelechy in Greek entelecheia was coined by Aristotle and transliterated in Latin as entelechia According to Sachs 1995 p 245 Aristotle invents the word by combining enteles ἐntelhs complete full grown with echein hexis to be a certain way by the continuing effort of holding on in that condition while at the same time punning on endelecheia ἐndelexeia persistence by inserting telos telos completion This is a three ring circus of a word at the heart of everything in Aristotle s thinking including the definition of motion Sachs therefore proposed a complex neologism of his own being at work staying the same 17 Another translation in recent years is being at an end which Sachs has also used 2 Entelecheia as can be seen by its derivation is a kind of completeness whereas the end and completion of any genuine being is its being at work energeia The entelecheia is a continuous being at work energeia when something is doing its complete work For this reason the meanings of the two words converge and they both depend upon the idea that every thing s thinghood is a kind of work or in other words a specific way of being in motion All things that exist now and not just potentially are beings at work and all of them have a tendency towards being at work in a particular way that would be their proper and complete way 17 Sachs explains the convergence of energeia and entelecheia as follows and uses the word actuality to describe the overlap between them 2 Just as energeia extends to entelecheia because it is the activity which makes a thing what it is entelecheia extends to energeia because it is the end or perfection which has being only in through and during activity Motion EditAristotle discusses motion kinesis in his Physics quite differently from modern science Aristotle s definition of motion is closely connected to his actuality potentiality distinction Taken literally Aristotle defines motion as the actuality entelecheia of a potentiality as such 18 What Aristotle meant however is the subject of several different interpretations A major difficulty comes from the fact that the terms actuality and potentiality linked in this definition are normally understood within Aristotle as opposed to each other On the other hand the as such is important and is explained at length by Aristotle giving examples of potentiality as such For example the motion of building is the energeia of the dunamis of the building materials as building materials as opposed to anything else they might become and this potential in the unbuilt materials is referred to by Aristotle as the buildable So the motion of building is the actualization of the buildable and not the actualization of a house as such nor the actualization of any other possibility which the building materials might have had 19 Building materials have different potentials One is that they can be built with Building is one motion that had been a potential in the building material So it is the energeia or putting into action of the building materials as building materials A house is built and no longer moving In an influential 1969 paper Aryeh Kosman divided up previous attempts to explain Aristotle s definition into two types criticised them and then gave his own third interpretation While this has not become a consensus it has been described as having become orthodox 20 This and similar more recent publications are the basis of the following summary 1 The process interpretation Edit Kosman 1969 and Coope 2009 associate this approach with W D Ross Sachs 2005 points out that it was also the interpretation of Averroes and Maimonides This interpretation is to use the words of Ross that it is the passage to actuality that is kinesis as opposed to any potentiality being an actuality 21 The argument of Ross for this interpretation requires him to assert that Aristotle actually used his own word entelecheia wrongly or inconsistently only within his definition making it mean actualization which is in conflict with Aristotle s normal use of words According to Sachs 2005 this explanation also can not account for the as such in Aristotle s definition 2 The product interpretation Edit Sachs 2005 associates this interpretation with St Thomas of Aquinas and explains that by this explanation the apparent contradiction between potentiality and actuality in Aristotle s definition of motion is resolved by arguing that in every motion actuality and potentiality are mixed or blended Motion is therefore the actuality of any potentiality insofar as it is still a potentiality Or in other words The Thomistic blend of actuality and potentiality has the characteristic that to the extent that it is actual it is not potential and to the extent that it is potential it is not actual the hotter the water is the less is it potentially hot and the cooler it is the less is it actually the more potentially hot As with the first interpretation however Sachs 2005 objects that One implication of this interpretation is that whatever happens to be the case right now is an entelechia as though something that is intrinsically unstable as the instantaneous position of an arrow in flight deserved to be described by the word that everywhere else Aristotle reserves for complex organized states that persist that hold out against internal and external causes that try to destroy them In a more recent paper on this subject Kosman associates the view of Aquinas with those of his own critics David Charles Jonathan Beere and Robert Heineman 22 3 The interpretation of Kosman Coope Sachs and others Edit Sachs 2005 amongst other authors such as Aryeh Kosman and Ursula Coope proposes that the solution to problems interpreting Aristotle s definition must be found in the distinction Aristotle makes between two different types of potentiality with only one of those corresponding to the potentiality as such appearing in the definition of motion He writes The man with sight but with his eyes closed differs from the blind man although neither is seeing The first man has the capacity to see which the second man lacks There are then potentialities as well as actualities in the world But when the first man opens his eyes has he lost the capacity to see Obviously not while he is seeing his capacity to see is no longer merely a potentiality but is a potentiality which has been put to work The potentiality to see exists sometimes as active or at work and sometimes as inactive or latent Coming to motion Sachs gives the example of a man walking across the room and says that Once he has reached the other side of the room his potentiality to be there has been actualized in Ross sense of the term This is a type of energeia However it is not a motion and not relevant to the definition of motion While a man is walking his potentiality to be on the other side of the room is actual just as a potentiality or in other words the potential as such is an actuality The actuality of the potentiality to be on the other side of the room as just that potentiality is neither more nor less than the walking across the room Sachs 1995 pp 78 79 in his commentary of Aristotle s Physics book III gives the following results from his understanding of Aristotle s definition of motion The genus of which motion is a species is being at work staying itself entelecheia of which the only other species is thinghood The being at work staying itself of a potency dunamis as material is thinghood The being at work staying the same of a potency as a potency is motion The importance of actuality in Aristotle s philosophy EditThe actuality potentiality distinction in Aristotle is a key element linked to everything in his physics and metaphysics 23 nbsp A marble block in Carrara Could there be a particular sculpture already existing in it as a potentiality Aristotle wrote approvingly of such ways of talking and felt it reflected a type of causation in nature which is often ignored in scientific discussion Aristotle describes potentiality and actuality or potency and action as one of several distinctions between things that exist or do not exist In a sense a thing that exists potentially does not exist but the potential does exist And this type of distinction is expressed for several different types of being within Aristotle s categories of being For example from Aristotle s Metaphysics 1017a 24 We speak of an entity being a seeing thing whether it is currently seeing or just able to see We speak of someone having understanding whether they are using that understanding or not We speak of corn existing in a field even when it is not yet ripe People sometimes speak of a figure being already present in a rock which could be sculpted to represent that figure Within the works of Aristotle the terms energeia and entelecheia often translated as actuality differ from what is merely actual because they specifically presuppose that all things have a proper kind of activity or work which if achieved would be their proper end Greek for end in this sense is telos a component word in entelecheia a work that is the proper end of a thing and also teleology This is an aspect of Aristotle s theory of four causes and specifically of formal cause eidos which Aristotle says is energeia 25 and final cause telos In essence this means that Aristotle did not see things as matter in motion only but also proposed that all things have their own aims or ends In other words for Aristotle unlike modern science there is a distinction between things with a natural cause in the strongest sense and things that truly happen by accident He also distinguishes non rational from rational potentialities e g the capacity to heat and the capacity to play the flute respectively pointing out that the latter require desire or deliberate choice for their actualization 26 Because of this style of reasoning Aristotle is often referred to as having a teleology and sometimes as having a theory of forms While actuality is linked by Aristotle to his concept of a formal cause potentiality or potency on the other hand is linked by Aristotle to his concepts of hylomorphic matter and material cause Aristotle wrote for example that matter exists potentially because it may attain to the form but when it exists actually it is then in the form 27 Teleology is a crucial concept throughout Aristotle s philosophy 28 This means that as well as its central role in his physics and metaphysics the potentiality actuality distinction has a significant influence on other areas of Aristotle s thought such as his ethics biology and psychology 29 The active intellect EditMain article Active Intellect The active intellect was a concept Aristotle described that requires an understanding of the actuality potentiality dichotomy Aristotle described this in his De Anima book 3 ch 5 430a10 25 and covered similar ground in his Metaphysics book 12 ch 7 10 The following is from the De Anima translated by Joe Sachs 30 with some parenthetic notes about the Greek The passage tries to explain how the human intellect passes from its original state in which it does not think to a subsequent state in which it does He inferred that the energeia dunamis distinction must also exist in the soul itself 31 since in nature one thing is the material hule for each kind genos this is what is in potency all the particular things of that kind but it is something else that is the causal and productive thing by which all of them are formed as is the case with an art in relation to its material it is necessary in the soul psuche too that these distinct aspects be present the one sort is intellect nous by becoming all things the other sort by forming all things in the way an active condition hexis like light too makes the colors that are in potency be at work as colors to phōs poiei ta dunamei onta chrōmata energeiai chrōmata This sort of intellect is separate as well as being without attributes and unmixed since it is by its thinghood a being at work for what acts is always distinguished in stature above what is acted upon as a governing source is above the material it works on Knowledge episteme in its being at work is the same as the thing it knows and while knowledge in potency comes first in time in any one knower in the whole of things it does not take precedence even in time This does not mean that at one time it thinks but at another time it does not think but when separated it is just exactly what it is and this alone is deathless and everlasting though we have no memory because this sort of intellect is not acted upon while the sort that is acted upon is destructible and without this nothing thinks This has been referred to as one of the most intensely studied sentences in the history of philosophy 31 In the Metaphysics Aristotle wrote at more length on a similar subject and is often understood to have equated the active intellect with being the unmoved mover and God Nevertheless as Davidson remarks Just what Aristotle meant by potential intellect and active intellect terms not even explicit in the De anima and at best implied and just how he understood the interaction between them remains moot to this day Students of the history of philosophy continue to debate Aristotle s intent particularly the question whether he considered the active intellect to be an aspect of the human soul or an entity existing independently of man 31 Post Aristotelian usage EditNew meanings of energeia or energy Edit Already in Aristotle s own works the concept of a distinction between energeia and dunamis was used in many ways for example to describe the way striking metaphors work 32 or human happiness Polybius about 150 BC in his work the Histories uses Aristotle s word energeia in both an Aristotelian way and also to describe the clarity and vividness of things 33 Diodorus Siculus in 60 30 BC used the term in a very similar way to Polybius However Diodorus uses the term to denote qualities unique to individuals Using the term in ways that could translated as vigor or energy in a more modern sense for society practice or custom for a thing operation or working like vigor in action 34 Platonism and neoplatonism Edit Already in Plato it is found implicitly the notion of potency and act in his cosmological presentation of becoming kinesis and forces dunamis 35 linked to the ordering intellect mainly in the description of the Demiurge and the Receptacle in his Timaeus 36 37 It has also been associated to the dyad of Plato s unwritten doctrines 38 and is involved in the question of being and non being since from the pre socratics 39 as in Heraclitus s mobilism and Parmenides immobilism The mythological concept of primordial Chaos is also classically associated with a disordered prime matter see also prima materia which being passive and full of potentialities would be ordered in actual forms as can be seen in Neoplatonism especially in Plutarch Plotinus and among the Church Fathers 39 and the subsequent medieval and Renaissance philosophy as in Ramon Lllull s Book of Chaos 40 and John Milton s Paradise Lost 41 Plotinus was a late classical pagan philosopher and theologian whose monotheistic re workings of Plato and Aristotle were influential amongst early Christian theologians In his Enneads he sought to reconcile ideas of Aristotle and Plato together with a form of monotheism that used three fundamental metaphysical principles which were conceived of in terms consistent with Aristotle s energeia dunamis dichotomy and one interpretation of his concept of the Active Intellect discussed above The Monad or the One sometimes also described as the Good This is the dunamis or possibility of existence The Intellect or Intelligence or to use the Greek term Nous which is described as God or a Demiurge It thinks its own contents which are thoughts equated to the Platonic ideas or forms eide The thinking of this Intellect is the highest activity of life The actualization of this thinking is the being of the forms This Intellect is the first principle or foundation of existence The One is prior to it but not in the sense that a normal cause is prior to an effect but instead Intellect is called an emanation of the One The One is the possibility of this foundation of existence Soul or to use the Greek term psyche The soul is also an energeia it acts upon or actualizes its own thoughts and creates a separate material cosmos that is the living image of the spiritual or noetic Cosmos contained as a unified thought within the Intelligence This was based largely upon Plotinus reading of Plato but also incorporated many Aristotelian concepts including the unmoved mover as energeia 42 New Testament usage Edit This section possibly contains original research New Testament concordances are not evidence that this concept is used in the New Testament Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Other than incorporation of Neoplatonic into Christendom by early Christian theologians such as St Augustine the concepts of dunamis and ergon the morphological root of energeia 43 are frequently used in the original Greek New Testament 44 Dunamis is used 119 times 45 and ergon is used 161 times 46 usually with the meaning power ability and act work respectively Essence energies debate in medieval Christian theology Edit Further information Essence Energies distinction In Eastern Orthodox Christianity St Gregory Palamas wrote about the energies actualities singular energeia in Greek or actus in Latin of God in contrast to God s essence ousia These are two distinct types of existence with God s energy being the type of existence which people can perceive while the essence of God is outside of normal existence or non existence or human understanding i e transcendental in that it is not caused or created by anything else Palamas gave this explanation as part of his defense of the Eastern Orthodox ascetic practice of hesychasm Palamism became a standard part of Orthodox dogma after 1351 47 In contrast the position of Western Medieval or Catholic Christianity can be found for example in the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas who relied on Aristotle s concept of entelechy when he defined God as actus purus pure act actuality unmixed with potentiality The existence of a truly distinct essence of God which is not actuality is not generally accepted in Catholic theology Influence on modal logic Edit The notion of possibility was greatly analyzed by medieval and modern philosophers Aristotle s logical work in this area is considered by some to be an anticipation of modal logic and its treatment of potentiality and time Indeed many philosophical interpretations of possibility are related to a famous passage on Aristotle s On Interpretation concerning the truth of the statement There will be a sea battle tomorrow 48 Contemporary philosophy regards possibility as studied by modal metaphysics to be an aspect of modal logic Modal logic as a named subject owes much to the writings of the Scholastics in particular William of Ockham and John Duns Scotus who reasoned informally in a modal manner mainly to analyze statements about essence and accident Influence on early modern physics Edit Aristotle s metaphysics his account of nature and causality was for the most part rejected by the early modern philosophers Francis Bacon in his Novum Organon in one explanation of the case for rejecting the concept of a formal cause or nature for each type of thing argued for example that philosophers must still look for formal causes but only in the sense of simple natures such as colour and weight which exist in many gradations and modes in very different types of individual bodies 49 In the works of Thomas Hobbes then the traditional Aristotelian terms potentia et actus are discussed but he equates them simply to cause and effect 50 nbsp Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz the source of the modern adaptations of Aristotle s concepts of potentiality and actuality There was an adaptation of at least one aspect of Aristotle s potentiality and actuality distinction which has become part of modern physics although as per Bacon s approach it is a generalized form of energy not one connected to specific forms for specific things The definition of energy in modern physics as the product of mass and the square of velocity was derived by Leibniz as a correction of Descartes based upon Galileo s investigation of falling bodies He preferred to refer to it as an entelecheia or living force Latin vis viva but what he defined is today called kinetic energy and was seen by Leibniz as a modification of Aristotle s energeia and his concept of the potential for movement which is in things Instead of each type of physical thing having its own specific tendency to a way of moving or changing as in Aristotle Leibniz said that instead force power or motion itself could be transferred between things of different types in such a way that there is a general conservation of this energy In other words Leibniz s modern version of entelechy or energy obeys its own laws of nature whereas different types of things do not have their own separate laws of nature 51 Leibniz wrote 52 the entelechy of Aristotle which has made so much noise is nothing else but force or activity that is a state from which action naturally flows if nothing hinders it But matter primary and pure taken without the souls or lives which are united to it is purely passive properly speaking also it is not a substance but something incomplete Leibniz s study of the entelechy now known as energy was a part of what he called his new science of dynamics based on the Greek word dunamis and his understanding that he was making a modern version of Aristotle s old dichotomy He also referred to it as the new science of power and action Latin potentia et effectu and potentia et actione And it is from him that the modern distinction between statics and dynamics in physics stems The emphasis on dunamis in the name of this new science comes from the importance of his discovery of potential energy which is not active but which conserves energy nevertheless As a science of power and action dynamics arises when Leibniz proposes an adequate architectonic of laws for constrained as well as unconstrained motions 53 For Leibniz like Aristotle this law of nature concerning entelechies was also understood as a metaphysical law important not only for physics but also for understanding life and the soul A soul or spirit according to Leibniz can be understood as a type of entelechy or living monad which has distinct perceptions and memory Influence on modern physics Edit Ideas about potentiality have been related to quantum mechanics where a wave function in a superposition of potential values before measurement has the potential to collapse into one of those values under the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics In particular the German physicist Werner Heisenberg called this a quantitative version of the old concept of potentia in Aristotelian philosophy 54 55 Entelecheia in modern philosophy and biology Edit As discussed above terms derived from dunamis and energeia have become parts of modern scientific vocabulary with a very different meaning from Aristotle s The original meanings are not used by modern philosophers unless they are commenting on classical or medieval philosophy In contrast entelecheia in the form of entelechy is a word used much less in technical senses in recent times As mentioned above the concept had occupied a central position in the metaphysics of Leibniz and is closely related to his monad in the sense that each sentient entity contains its own entire universe within it But Leibniz use of this concept influenced more than just the development of the vocabulary of modern physics Leibniz was also one of the main inspirations for the important movement in philosophy known as German Idealism and within this movement and schools influenced by it entelechy may denote a force propelling one to self fulfillment In the biological vitalism of Hans Driesch living things develop by entelechy a common purposive and organising field Leading vitalists like Driesch argued that many of the basic problems of biology cannot be solved by a philosophy in which the organism is simply considered a machine 56 Vitalism and its concepts like entelechy have since been discarded as without value for scientific practice by the overwhelming majority of professional biologists citation needed However in philosophy aspects and applications of the concept of entelechy have been explored by scientifically interested philosophers and philosophically inclined scientists alike One example was the American critic and philosopher Kenneth Burke 1897 1993 whose concept of the terministic screens illustrates his thought on the subject Prof Denis Noble argues that just as teleological causation is necessary to the social sciences a specific teleological causation in biology expressing functional purpose should be restored and that it is already implicit in neo Darwinism e g selfish gene Teleological analysis proves parsimonious when the level of analysis is appropriate to the complexity of the required level of explanation e g whole body or organ rather than cell mechanism 57 See also EditActual infinity Actus purus Alexander of Aphrodisias Essence Energies distinction First cause Henosis Hylomorphism Hypokeimenon Hypostasis philosophy and religion Sumbebekos Theosis Unmoved moversReferences Edit dynamis energeia translated into Latin as potentia actualitas earlier also possibilitas efficacia Giorgio Agamben Opus Dei An Archaeology of Duty 2013 p 46 a b c d Sachs 2005 Sachs 1999 p lvii Durrant 1993 p 206 Locke 1689 chpt XXI See Perseus dictionary references for dunamis Metaphysics 1019a 1019b The translations used are those of Tredennick on the Perseus project From Physics 192a18 Translation from Sachs 1995 p 45 Physics 193b Sachs 1995 p 51 Metaphysics 1047a30 in the Sachs 1999 translation the phrase being at work which is designed to converge in meaning with being at work staying complete Greek is ἐlhly8e d ἡ ἐnergeia toὔnoma ἡ prὸs tὴn ἐntelexeian synti8emenh a b Bradshaw 2004 page 13 Durrant 1993 p 201 Metaphysics 1050a21 23 In Tredinnick s translation For the activity is the end and the actuality energeia is the activity ergon hence the term actuality is derived from activity and tends to have the meaning of complete reality entelecheia Greek tὸ gὰr ἔrgon telos ἡ dὲ ἐnergeia tὸ ἔrgon diὸ kaὶ toὔnoma ἐnergeia legetai katὰ tὸ ἔrgon kaὶ synteinei prὸs tὴn ἐntelexeian Sachs 1995 Sachs 1999 Sachs 2005 Metaphysics 1048a30ff Nicomachean Ethics Book X Chapters 1 5 a b Sachs 1995 Physics 201a10 11 201a27 29 201b4 5 Metaphysics Book VII Metaphysics Book XI 1066a Trifogli Cecilia 2000 Oxford Physics in the Thirteenth Century ca 1250 1270 Motion Infinity Place amp Time Brill p 8 ISBN 9004116575 Physics text with commentary London 1936 p 359 quoted by Sachs 2005 Kosman 2013 chapter 2 footnote 19 Sachs 1995 245 Tredennick s translation with links to his footnote cross references using the Perseus online resources For we say that both that which sees potentially and that which sees actually is a seeing thing And in the same way we call understanding both that which can use the understanding and that which does and we call tranquil both that in which tranquillity is already present and that which is potentially tranquil Similarly too in the case of substances For we say that Hermes is in the stone Cf Aristotle Met 3 5 6 and the half of the line in the whole and we call corn what is not yet ripe But when a thing is potentially existent and when not must be defined elsewhere Aristotle Metaphysics 9 9 Metaphysics 1050b Greek ὥste fanerὸn ὅti ἡ oὐsia kaὶ tὸ eἶdos ἐnergeia ἐstin Metaphysics 1048a The Greek words are orexis for desire and proairesis for deliberate choice Metaphysics 1050a15 Greek ἔti ἡ ὕlh ἔsti dynamei ὅti ἔl8oi ἂn eἰs tὸ eἶdos ὅtan de ge ἐnergeiᾳ ᾖ tote ἐn tῷ eἴdei ἐstin Johnson Monte Ransome 2008 Aristotle on teleology Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199238507 Willows Adam M April 2022 Good Actually Aristotelian Metaphysics and the Guise of the Good PDF Philosophy 97 2 187 205 doi 10 1017 S0031819121000425 S2CID 246525266 Sachs 2001 a b c Davidson 1992 p 3 Rhetoric 1411b Bradshaw 2004 p 51 Bradshaw 2004 p 55 Cleary John J 1998 Powers that Be The Concept of Potency in Plato and Aristotle Methexis XI Brisson Luc January 1 2016 The Intellect and the cosmos Methodos 16 ISSN 1626 0600 doi 10 4000 methodos 4463 Claghorn George S 1954 Aristotle s Criticism of the Receptacle Dordrecht Springer Netherlands pp 5 19 doi 10 1007 978 94 011 8839 5 2 ISBN 9789401181907 Turner John Douglas 2001 Sethian Gnosticism and the Platonic Tradition em ingles S l Presses Universite Laval ISBN 9782763778341 p 329 a b Dillon Jonh Plutarch as a Polemicist Potentiality and Act in Chaos lullianarts narpan net Retrieved 2019 09 13 Chambers A B 1998 Chaos in Paradise Lost Methexis XI 1 55 84 doi 10 2307 2707859 JSTOR 2707859 See Moore Edward Plotinus Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy and Gerson Lloyd 2018 Plotinus Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University The direct quote above comes from Moore https en wiktionary org wiki E1 BC 94 CF 81 CE B3 CE BF CE BD Ancient Greek user generated source Vocabulary Frequency List 15 April 2017 Dunamis Meaning in the Bible New Testament Greek Lexicon NAS Ergon Meaning in Bible New Testament Greek Lexicon King James Version Gregory Palamas An Historical Overview Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2010 12 27 See copy of W D Ross s translation scanned on Internet Archive Book II aphorism V De Corpore chapter X in Latin in English Klein 1985 and Sachs 2005 Leibniz who criticized Descartes physics and invented a science of dynamics explicitly acknowledged his debt to Aristotle see e g Specimen Dynamicum whose doctrine of entelecheia he regarded himself as restoring in a modified form From Leibniz we derive our current notions of potential and kinetic energy whose very names pointing to the actuality which is potential and the actuality which is motion preserve the Thomistic resolutions of the two paradoxes in Aristotle s definition of motion Leibniz 1890 p 234 Duchesneau 1998 See Jaeger Kistler Max 2018 Engelhard Kristina Quante Michael eds Potentiality in Physics Handbook of Potentiality Dordrecht Springer Netherlands pp 353 374 doi 10 1007 978 94 024 1287 1 14 ISBN 978 94 024 1287 1 S2CID 125452936 retrieved 2023 02 24 Mayr 2002 Noble D 2016 Dance to the tune of life Biological relativity Cambridge University Press pp 53 198 210 277 Bibliography EditAristotle 1999 Aristotle s Metaphysics a new translation by Joe Sachs Santa Fe NM Green Lion Books ISBN 1 888009 03 9 Beere Jonathan 1990 Doing and Being An interpretation of Aristotle sMetaphysics Theta Oxford Bradshaw David 2004 Aristotle East and West Metaphysics and the Division of Christendom Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82865 9 Charles David 1984 Aristotle s Philosophy of Action Duckworth Coope Ursula 2009 Change and its Relation to Actuality and Potentiality in Anagnostopoulos Georgios ed A Companion to Aristotle Blackwell p 277 ISBN 9781444305678 Davidson Herbert 1992 Alfarabi Avicenna and Averroes on Intellect Oxford University Press Duchesneau Francois 1998 Leibniz s Theoretical Shift in the Phoranomus and Dynamica de Potentia Perspectives on Science 6 1 amp 2 77 109 doi 10 1162 posc a 00545 S2CID 141935224 Durrant Michael 1993 Aristotle s De Anima in Focus Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 05340 2 Jaeger Gregg 2017 Quantum potentiality revisited Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 375 2106 20160390 Bibcode 2017RSPTA 37560390J doi 10 1098 rsta 2016 0390 PMID 28971942 Klein Jacob 1985 Leibnitz an Introduction Lectures and Essays St Johns College Press Kosman Aryeh 1969 Aristotle s Definition of Motion Phronesis 14 1 40 62 doi 10 1163 156852869x00037 Kosman Aryeh 2013 The Activity of Being an Essay on Aristotle s Ontology Harvard University Press Heinaman Robert 1994 Is Aristotle s definition of motion circular Apeiron 27 doi 10 1515 APEIRON 1994 27 1 25 S2CID 171013812 Leibniz Gottfried 1890 1715 On the Doctrine of Malebranche A Letter to M Remond de Montmort containing Remarks on the Book of Father Tertre against Father Malebranche The Philosophical Works of Leibnitz p 234 Locke John 1689 Book II Chapter XXI Of Power An Essay concerning Human Understanding and Other Writings Part 2 The Works of John Locke in Nine Volumes Vol 2 Rivington Mayr Ernst 2002 The Walter Arndt Lecture The Autonomy of Biology Sachs Joe 1995 Aristotle s Physics a Guided Study Rutgers University Press Sachs Joe 1999 Aristotle s Metaphysics a New Translation by Joe Sachs Santa Fe NM Green Lion Books ISBN 1 888009 03 9 Sachs Joe 2001 Aristotle s On the Soul and On Memory and Recollection Green Lion Books Sachs Joe 2005 Aristotle Motion and its Place in Nature Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Warnock Mary 1950 A Note on Aristotle Categories 6a 15 Mind New Series 59 552 554 doi 10 1093 mind LIX 236 552 Old translations of Aristotle Edit Aristotle 2009 The Internet Classics Archive Aristotle On the Soul J A Smith translator MIT Aristotle 2009 The Internet Classics Archive Aristotle Categories E M Edghill translator MIT Aristotle 2009 The Internet Classics Archive Aristotle Physics R P Hardie amp Gaye R K translators MIT Aristotle 1908 Metaphysica translated by W D Ross The Works of Aristotle Vol VIII Oxford Clarendon Press Aristotle 1989 Metaphysics Hugh Tredennick trans Aristotle in 23 Volumes Vol 17 18 Cambridge Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd This 1933 translation is reproduced online at the Perseus Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Potentiality and actuality amp oldid 1176742619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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