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ETA AND THETA OF ARISTOTLE'S METAPHYSICS
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\JNlVERSilY OF GEORGIA ltBRARIU
/~OTES
ON BOOKS
ETA AND THETA OF ARISTOTLE'S METAPHYSICS
being the record
by
MYLES BURNYEAT and others of a seminar held in London, 1979-1982
i.
PREFACE
This
monograph
is
a
sequel
to Notes on Zeta,
by the Oxford Philosophy sub-Faculty.
published
The London Group,
in
1979
started by
G.E.L. Owen in 1976, and described by Christopher Kirwan in the preface to Notes on Zeta,
has continued its discussions
totle's
Metaphysics
in
the
Institute
Square,
and we were encouraged,
of
of the text of Aris-
Classical
Studies
in Gordon
by reviewers of Notes on Zeta among
others, to publish the record of our discussions of Books Eta and Theta. The
form
before. some a
in which the material
No major
of
revisions
the material
given
passage
of
so as to bring the
text
(and
the dates on which the sessions consistency
of
is
presentation;
presented is much the same as
have been made;
but
together all
accordingly
occurred),
but
some
I
have rearranged
the discussions of
deleted
and
tried
references
to
to achieve some
inconsistencies
remain
-
for
example in the transliteration of Greek words. The
majority
of
the
minutes
of
sessions
are
the work of Myles
Burnyeat, and a substantial number of others are by Bob Sharplesi others Apart from those per-
were recorded by Lesley Brown and Alan Lacey.
sons,
the meetings were
Heinaman, Lloyd,
Gerald
Malcolm
attended
Hughes,
fairly regularly by Julia Annas, Bob
Christopher
Scholfield,
Richard
Kirwan,
Jonathan
Sorabji,
Julius
Lear,
Geoffrey
Tomin,
Kathleen
Wilkes, and Michael Woodsi and most of them were presided over by Gwilym Owen. A
focus
incisive circulated this by
to our discussions was given by some characteristically
and
challenging
or
tabled
Monograph
Bob
the
Heinaman,
included course,
in
a
paper
the
full
by
Introductory
appropriate
Richard read
Notes
Gwilym Owen.
Sorabji
to
one
place, and
session
on
individual
chapters
These have been included as
Bob Sharples. by
in
have been contributions There
Sarah Waterlow,
is
also
though,
of
development of her ideas on the subject of the paper
can now be found in her Passage and Possibility (Oxford, 1982). The meetings of Metaphysics our died
took
discussions
the Group that
place of
in July 1982.
Book
between Theta
discussed
May
1979
and
were
almost
these
two books of the
November
1982.
Thus,
complete when Gwilym Owen
We should like to dedicate this Monograph to his
memory.
The debt
to him,
Group and
presided over
it
as for
the
person who established
seven years
is
only one
the London
of many that
we, like so many other Aristotelian scholars, owe to him. clay 1984
MICHAEL WOODS
ii. 111.
ABBREVIATIONS
D.K.
Fragmente der Vorsokratiker, ed. H. Diels and W. Kranz, Berlin. 1903.
Jaeger
Aristotelis Metaphysica, W.Jaeger, Oxford Classical Texts, 1957.
Kirwan
Aristotle, Metaphysics translated with notes by Christopher Kirwan, Oxford 1970.
Oxford translation
Volume VIII (Metaphysica, translated W.D. Ross) in The Works of Aristotle translated into English, Oxford 1928.
Ps. Alexander
Commentary on Z (in fact by a later hand) in Alexander of Aphrodisias, In Aristotelis Metaphysica Commentaria, ed. M. Hayduck, Berlin 1891.
Reale
Aristotelis, la Metafisica, traduzione, introduzione e commento, Giovanni Reale, Loffredo 1968.
Ross
Aristotle's Metaphysics, text and commentary, W.D. Ross, Oxford 1924.
The works of Aristotle are sometimes referred to by the following abbreviations: Posterior Analytics
An. Post. or A. PQ. An. Prior
Prior Analytics
Cat.
Categories
De Gen. An. or GA
De Generatione Animalium
De Gen. et Corr. or G&C
De Generatione et Corruptione
De Int.
De Interpretatione
DMA
De Motu Animalium
De Mem.
De Memoria
E.E.
Eudemian Ethics
E.N.
Nicomachean Ethics
Met.
Metaphysics
neteor.
Meteorologic a
PA
De Partibus Animalium
Parv. Nat.
Parva Naturalia
Phys.
Physics
Rhet.
Rhetoric
So ph. El. or SE
De Sophisticis Elenchis
Top.
Topics
Capital Greek
letters
refer
to
books
of
the
Metaphysics
The convention has usually been Greek words without inverted commas.
unless
otherwise specified. Unprefixed page numbers, as in 'l019a 10' refer to the Metaphysics.
Other references: Ackrill
Aristotle's Categories and DeInterpretatione, translated with notes by J.L. Ackrill, Oxford, 1963.
Apostle
Aristotle's Metaphysics, translated with commentaries by Hippocrates G. Apostle, Indiana, 1966.
Bonitz
Index Aristotelicus, H. Bonitz, Berlin 1870. •lr
Aristotelis netaphysica, H. Bonitz, Bonn 1848-9.
followed
of
writing
mentioned
CHAPTER
l042a 3-24
The
first
to have a summary of was it e[pT'J'ta.l.
seeks
as
placed
strongly
suggests
we
but the next jolts our expectations.
are
Where
that the object of enquiry is the causes and principles
and elements of which
sentence
Z,
substance?
(~
Not Zl
Ross).
Not El (Apostle),
and causes of 'tciiv Ov-rwv as
principles
r
substances but everything.
l-2
(cf.
including not
l003b 18)?
just
A 1-2 fits better
still, offering several parallels to what is to come in Hl. Further difficulties:
and
the
elements
(1)
1C42a 6-10 goes against Zl6 on parts
('agreed by all'
might mean
'agreed by all but
the
speaker'
but l042a 24 resumes talk of agr~ed substances as if the list
had
contained
not
stance
controversial
items).
(2)
It
seems
remarkably
fiv eTvcu. and b1toxeC~evov side by side as cases of sub-
bland to set 'tC which
are
consideration
of
established what
people
by
I
argument
will
say
which
under
are arrived at
dialectical
by
pressure.
It is going back to where we started out at the beginning of Z3, before the hard work of Z was done. genus and universal. blished
by
even by
his
genus
is
argument
( a:x:~.wQ'
opponents
more
( 1038b 7 is
1
it
is
not
arguments
in
Z.
substance
the
nearest
15
to
take
advance
cases
are
can yield
xa.e6Xou
just
one
intended, both:
plus Forms (1.
than £roo,, parallel
have to go back to B for sible
Still worse (3)
to conjoin these with
If the latter also are cases of substance estaI
For
arguments
5
universal ~ood
not
more
there
is
a
not
problem as
definability
z,
nor
particular You really
[It was thought pos-
c!6wv
two. to
than
enough).
yfvo,, 1:Wv xa.e'~,QC"'t'a. substance,
in
these do not urge that
that line of argument. "=
case of
e.g.
but
by Ar
If,
how a
so
that
14-
however,
two
single
argument
selects universal over particular,
16), but not genus over eT6ov6e:cn.c; - see Ross' note), 6e:cr)..liil
(rhough xpCcrCa. 13,
vtz. o6aCa. We;, S.vtpye:~a.,
seeking,
for of>o-Ca.
look
is
differentia
ciently clearly by
C:HAPTER l
There
So we come to the main conclusion of the chapter.
is
a
precisely
it
is
The conn2:ction between what
patch of ice to exist and what sort of
for
2:
patch of
a substantive thesis,
ice
to
thing ice as such
olxTC« displayed in a definition
the
the o('tCa. -ro1'S e!va.L,
is
a
a
exist
and moreover
what (so
it
is
you
get
when you
'Snares',
p. 82).
a
that
thesis
has
say This
to be
understood, as Ar would understand it, with some appropriate restriction is
no
one
answer
to
the
question
'What
is
substance
as
actuality?' on
(nor
a
mere
the
the differentiae
which
our
definitions
connect
with
the
equally
case
that
of
terms
On
matter.
the
variety
of
the
types
of matter,
the
for
which
it
definition of
is
claimed true.
bachelor
tells
For it
you what
it
is
is not for a
various bachelor
types
of
range
three answers as Democritus supposed), but as many as the to
exist;
a
bachelor
does
not
cease
to exist when he ceases
note that to be an unmarried man.
a lO-ll includes the high-low range of sound as matter in the definition But
of <J"U~ ,l.'lbi guous
this
">oul
but
supposj
inn
t
(NB xa.(,
1.7
on
principles)
Zll.
the
face
what
of
it
the .1mbiguity thesis
from
term
ambiguity
is
the
H3
or
is
thesis is
of
type
-
these
(But
Yet
the
is
.1nother
4-ways ambiguous
-
sentential context ~t:l_ect~ one of
the
t::"NO
would
not
it
36-7?)
'There's a man
it can happen that a
meanings
be
whether
point of
to ~he view Lha.t
ttnless
the
is
questions about
reading
definition,
then what would be
would commit one
Or
(on Aris-
definition discussed
,,..,e face
right
is simply
another?
Platonist
in the chapter,
which
int~re"itingly
!Jy Ar
ZlO-ll.
and
ambiguous.
house'
'vhether
elsewhere
doubtful
is
the
the
believed,
between
The in
as
Here,
relation
that
it
the
thesis actually espoused than a consequence deducible
totelian
At
'dnimal'
The ~ passage remains to be considered, together
problem: is
hypothetical
a
dS
less
a
import
,md
Wuxf)again, l. 6).
so
1~43b
4-14
eluded
La L.ll
given
of the term.
This
'2xploitell in a p!lper by ~1.J. Lo•lx in !'!_ind,
approached
perhaps
its
this
with
some
bark was uorse
dismdy,
but eventually con-
than its bite.
Ar's general
purpose seemed reasonably clear; the ctifftculties were those of detailed lnterpretation.
::r6v8EO'"I.C,: nor cerned;
Ar
a
iJ,tl;1..:~ertaln
2.J -d
qnly
used
father language
r_o
,\ntlSthenes.
L~a_t3tetus
the and
content
(A)
Dream
and
for
its
"lpplies.
allowing definition for composites could not be the consequence (ilx;-r',
of
28)
an d.JtopCa. about
Burnyeat 's paper to
think
defining
necessary
it
to
follow
against
'point'
Ross'
Jaeger's
from
the
accepted
from
a disinclination
emending
or
translation
'plausibility',
so
of
26-l [xa.C] •••
of xotov ~lv ~c x~X.
as
Socratic -r(-Jto'tov contrast),
for xaLp6v,
that
Ar
'timeliness'
should
not
part not
the ~~opCa.
of
a
concession
of
himself
sort.
The objection here was that 'Silver is like tin'seems a striking example which any
should
have
some
non-definitional
like tin'
part
tifully
in Cyprus', to
play.
descriptive
it
whereas
statement
(m
would
8urnyeat 's
serve.
reading
'Silver
could
be an (imperfect)
applied is
the
'silver'
H3.
The
next
question
which
specifically
'the
Antisthenians enough of a
sistent problems from can
said
out
at
definition be
and
how
Ant.
l043b
where
similarly
of
of
the
once: being
it,
two
(1)
23-8
fits
with tJ.29
persons'.
Perhaps Ant.
passages,
but
if
one
does
try,
A 29 can be read as saying that
impossible)
nothing else;
either that "X.6yo< is
'It is
32-4,
there to be no call to make a con-
only (ii)
a even
thing's
proper
if X6yoc:;
is
definition, only one X6yo.; is admitted for each thing, so: case,
l024h
H3 has the more diffuse reference
uneducated
paradox-monger for
position arise
was
names
like tin',
two
(so far
definition
broader
than
the very thing that H3 allows. 'Nhy
impossibility 0f
falsehood
in of
consequence
Any solution must be such as to explain of
contradicting
( 1024b
33-4).
his
thesis
Ant.
and
practically
was to
the
to
the
~v
Socrates,
thesis
is
8:
that
the context
roughly, su bj ec t s one description
only
f.~hich
a unity in virtue of itself or in virtue of something else?
The analogies between sub-
was
derived time
particuJ ar set
oi
of
that substances ~ numbers in 1043b 33-34, even though this is quali-
by ·i'l'.oH;
be as
that
\.Jhere
analogy (1043b 34-36) applies "!!re easily
than to numbers.
l 1 V~2a
!17
help.
that,
this
stance and number were felt to be rather weak to justify the assertion
fied
could
act
ra.ve:p6v in 32 and oU~wc; in 33 referred
rather
than back,
l044a 7 being advanced as a parallel in the
case of the latter.
1044a 2-9
The
(e.g.)
sense
given by the various corrections in a 3 is conIt would in any case be odd to say that the number
was
a
Ihe Platonists
principle of referred
to
and so can't,
for
unity
have his
principle an
own
l045a 7f.
answer in
of to
order
this
(cf.
demand,
to make
the
unity in
standing of number, a
ff.,
33
more
of
composite
substance
may
admit
and
,,....hich
less.
si.mply
fhe
This
:t.sserts
that
the
nf
appears
to contradict
~ubs~-~~-~ does
suggestion was made that
not
admit
the present passage
might be explained by the doctrine of tl1e 1mperfect mastering of matter
firmed by 1044a 7. seven
3b
':'a...'::...
The
substance xa~& ~b El&o~ cannot.
although
M7
among
l043b
34
the have
a
l082a
20
ff.);
but
it
numbered.
different
in Aristotle's view,
under-
meet his demand does
he himself
and does he have to have an answer of objection against
refers to the problem again,
but
might
even
22
be
the
Platonists?
H6
the discussion that follows
is concerned with substances rather than numbers, that xa.t .~~:e:pt ~oi;c; dpL8uo6.hl>.ou),
l035a
278a
14-16),
this
13-15;
cf.
De
1035a Gen.
et
indicate
the
either
issue
the
form
of
the
or
the
ambiguity of composite
certain
terms
and Heinaman' s
that
can
contention
that this is parallel to Aristotle's usage elsewhere and not in itself anything this of
It
unusual.
position
through
predication,
and
Aristotle's point at tinguishing is
not,
many
but
cases
the
where
suggested
concern
that
difficulty
the beginning of
cases
rather
was
the
where
the
it
-
that
Aristotle
substance of
should
applying
this
'snub'.
not arise
But
in
the
had
arrived
at
be
the
subject
to
the
form.
H3 is not the difficulty of dis-
sharp
the
referring
distinction
grounds
to
the
that.
house,
between
even
the
if
in
difference
what
is
house
form
the
to
1043a
understanding
it
soul)
was
the
two
its
form,
involve understanding
contended,
saying that the term -
that
(though there were problems as to
But,
composite
37
was conceded on all sides
included
for
below).
in
It
in some cases (e.g.
see
opposed
claim
it
even in
as
the
primary.
(e.g.)
not,
too;
on
is
which he
this
'house'
scarecly
can mean the
certainly does
say,
and
took him to be expressing his own view; still less, therefore, would
Is Aristotle
saying
(I)
that a shelter made of bricks and stones
is a house because a shelter (a permanent shelter, is;
or (II)
and
stones
to exclude cloaks?)
that a shelter is a house because a shelter made of bricks is?
(1)
any
seemed
suggestion
excessively
of
Platonist
transcendent
forms
to
some,
The point was made that in ordinary usage
tainly applies to the composite,
rather than to the form;
totle
order
necessarily
usage? that
It was
'shelter'
composite, form
of
exist
bound
suggested
appears
house
in
in
the that
the
of
priority
point
apart
from
'house'
cer-
but is Aris-
implied
of 7tp0(xnc;
the concrete individual,
Consequently
identical
in
and
i.n the ?;O
l044a
from bile, becdU3e that 1s Lube under-
the
n•~ed
no Jl)uht he
:, 44a
determined
in
cveryth1ng comes
, rihutes
then
uf CaxWt:; yO.p x-rA..,
light
resolved
I3
is
And they remain such,
derive from Y
sw~~t-anJ-che-~itter-
,lJ\o.'
so,
both
to
example
the
start
it were.
rudd
(the
in 23
phlegm might Jerive
m,JV
r t-'lJssibly
:·ut
thing
not commit
'taU cd.noU 19-2(1.
Phlt~gm
>fl.m>-.•
to
the
still
the ultimate derivation story,
you by
water,
does, for as 31 shows he is thinking of the form as the efficient cause,
The Presocratic style of reply is not sufficiently explanatory.
)-]),
t
and
:044a 25
products;
(2)
different matter-
is due to the effi·tor:n'!
thing, But
here
proposed has
to
not
all
which means the
the
potentialities
unavoidable
reference
explanation circular. explain
is
can
be
realized
by
Socrates and Callias must realize them differently.
how Socrates
to
What
'by
and Callias
13
a
single
thing'
'difference in matter' are
two
rather
:nakes
the
precisely than
one.
: .44b )
U'44b R So the problem is not solved by taking matter as potentiality for change, :1ence
Is
difference
it
solved
in matter
by
taking
two parcels of matter, this
[f
r.wo
if
if
one.
have
'.i'~ere :1 f
are
trick,
knows
Partial
in
potentiality
matter
distinct.
why
fixate
French and reply:
as
the
for
that
already
we
left
one
os
picked
it,
but
~
Objection:
on material
that doesn't,
difference
composition?
they
are
two
E.g.
persons,
this is red-haired/ snubnosed/ 5'
not)
out NB
presuppose
the this
subject whole
for
as
their
tall/
ascription
one whole
discussion
that
efficient
human
wondering whether
8-20
We
an eclipse.
the
they
are
one man or
:3uffers
the
us \JXT} to
move
to
(what
There
is
no matter
eclipse.
the
rawc; (Ross:
So
it
we would call) which
i.s
(Elsehwere Ar
attributes.)
natural
the
events,
presumably)
there
is
prefers
to
let
such as
substance
no
final
cause
analyze ob<JCa. We; lvlpye::l.a.
presumably
to
be
i~fining
(an important
where
the
'hy
the
subject
but
it
must
is
interposition of
be
specified but
unclear the
unless
Earth'.
you Why
not add
put into the the
unclear?
efficient That i t
sufficiently illuminating for explanatory purposes seemed more thanthatit issimplyincomplete.
With sleep
he dispelled concerns which is the first ~leep.
Or rather, which is the first under~o
something
-
what?
the
unclarity
to
bit of the animal to undergo
bit of
the animal (perhaps the
( 't'C 't'O xd.8oc;
18-19),
H2
began
by
why
So
go
back
saying so
that
that
to \5ATJ
it in
there was remained H4?
duce a PS, which in the case of H3 is explicitly said not to be relevant to the main project ( l043a 38-b l).
Perhaps some relevant connections
thing
to
could
have
alert
us
be
done,
to
them.
the
that
the
but it cannot be said that Ar does anyE.g.
he
fails
matter we are
specified ol"XeCa \SAT).
correctly
that Ar context.
is
patching also
We
in material thought
it
to
Bonitz only in
say,
as
he so easily
We
had
the
now familiar
originally put noteworthy
express.ion va.(• dX\6. occurs
otherwise according
to
comparing with actuality has
twice
the
together
that
here
for
the
brightly
(16-17,
19) but
~gna Moralia three times,
and that such examples of va.C as Bonitz 1 ists are all from early works plus Z9 10J4a 17.
text
You can say 'An eclipse is a deprivation of light'
formula?),
4
H3 and H4 both begin by telling us not to forget something, as if to intro-
CHAPTER FIVE
With the formal cause there
by the moon - did Ar notice that this is an instance of the 'snub'
likely
as well,
count
( sc.
not
sought
the Earth.
complication.
phenomenon,
chap,
to
feeling another
matter of 3.n eclipse.
is an efficient cause,
There
the limits ofAristotelian teleology).
cause
be
is
is a
·4as
to
about :Jfxr-(a. J>~ 'b1toxe::C1-1.E\1Tl xa.t ill8E!pEcr8a•. o<e ~l:v OWn~
O<e Oe
obx OUOU.8etp'riL CtVEU '8E(pEetVEp6v. H3
l043b
14-16 dvd.yxT] 07)
'{
there-
:;ic k
wine.
vi
1~e~a
r.
l'he
12~4 whcrn a dist.inction is dr<Jwn i.n
li.ne:•s
IJotentiality
rnalrer,
as well as 5uvd.fJ-E4 A?
:..JZJ.ter,
1 ' ' 1 1 ' '·
about
Ou\IO.j..LE~ A, and B L_; the kva.v1:Cov ot -\,
If X is
&uvn~E"
2 examples: · •Hl\1\
dp11ri.1i
oppnsitcschauging into
- s.Jmewhat tenuous- cor.nection wit~ the first
the
foro
~
a
i.ntr(Jduced
..
l I ! '\
-, ' · r
(_()1\'.jOT r:S UN
~I
fH ETA ~I)~
fl~namisl~4 (5, 6) correspond of 1::.12.
1046a
primary cases
6-9
is
(Contrast
nymy.
J,
which
insists
more
meaning without
that
tn
the
~un~ton 1 _ 4
:.,horthand
the relation between derivative and
EE
VII
l236a
'.~hich
7-33
similarity
and
similarity without
EN
explains \'Ill
using
focal
p_~ilia
by
1156b 19-21, meaning;
focal
35-1157a
and
explain
What is the str0nger relation bP.tween primary and deri-
as you will.)
A case
(1) ~~
of
sense
1, of
in
(e.g.
in a
ousia.
h.')
derivative sense coincides directly with A case
(ii)
requires
(iii)
servative others
~
of
viz.
seemingly
viz. iatros.
but
of
iatrikon
in
a
derivative
not coincide wi.th one of !~ 1 '
need
A case of hugieinvn in one derivative sense ('pre-
requires
and
h.')
'sign of
coincide
may
rloubtful.
with
(iv)
one
hugieinon 1 ,
of
A case of
philia_ in (v)
a derivative sense does not expressly require one of philia 1 . cases .\~d
of
may
if
the
is
no
dunaton coincide
and
dunamis
qualification regular
some
with
in
of
'partly'
requirement,
derivative
senses
logical
priority
does
rz
did
not
here at
into
Notes
46a
( i.s
something, 24-8,
I+Sb becoming)
and
that
b 29-34a 5;
on Zeta, of
lv 271
not
that
something
(ii)
6)
p.
the
1
ZH
in
asserted
entail
natural
the
back in
general, lv "tott; ( 1028a
35-6),
as
that the account of substance
derivative
cases,
-rO.~ 1t€p\ -ri'\~ o!xrCn.; }.t\yoL~
l..s
everything
that
from
~omethlng
same
in
form',
as
implied
is
to ZH in 8:
(i)
[cf. •ep\ -roil
6
do,
In
in
becomes
{is
becoming)
and
the
agency
by
referring to ZB
ni.ng
32
16.
in
the
first
34,
taken
from
H6,
esp.
until with
6. Zl
1 i045b 35-46a 1, "'hat is most useful
l045a
that
20-33:
All this suggests that
(tv
"tat'~
~s
what
we
expect to
1(p!j.rto~c;
A6yo~Q,
ZH
l7-9
existed as a unit, "ueginbe in~
already
a
proper
part of Z; which is compa(ible Y-'ith the hypothesis of H's pre-existence, us discussed earlier.
the
10,
b
17.
the
same
contrast and
14,
21,
in
b 6,
uses
chapters
(2),
11.
27,
26-7
general
9.
Llrsl
of
49b
'!2:1namei in 87
2).
connection
In
with
94
he
by
the
later
at
the
both
dunamis,
scope
at
i.n ~16
(thus
49a
37,
in
the
dunamei 1,
second
l050a 3,
0,
5,
at 8-
6,
occurs:
(e.g. In '.:18
9).
to
of dunamis
sections dunaton
~~_naton
of
is about
dominance
l048b
l047a 24-47b 2 (note 0-~namei
enlarges
l