Andreas Gasser attempts to trace the development of the concept of form from the early category script up to its definitive modification through the introduction of the complementary subject of matter in the first Physics book and thereby to pave the way for a new interpretation of the Met. Z, H, .
The concept of form makes up one of the central aspects of Aristotle's philosophy. For quite some time however there has been discord over just exactly what Aristotle wanted to have understood by this. The suggestions range from the identification of the form with the kind, right up to the assertion that they are on the contrary something individual, meaning that Socrates' form would be a different one to that of Plato. The focus of the dispute centers on the "Met. Z, H, " books. Although the reason for this is well-founded (because the theory of form, and therefore Aristotle's ontology, reach their pinnacle therein), their prerequisite wealth is however often underestimated. Andreas Gasser thus attempts to trace the development of the concept of matter from the early category script up to its definitive modification through the introduction of the complementary subject of matter in the first Physics book and thereby to pave the way for a new interpretation of the Met. Z, H, .
Autorentext
Geboren 1977; 1999-2007 Studium der Philosophie und Soziologie; seit 2007 Mitarbeit am Projekt Alcuin (www.alcuin.de); seit 2008 Dozent an der Universität Regensburg; 2013 Promotion in Philosophie; derzeit Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Lehrstuhl für Geschichte der Philosophie der Universität Regensburg.
The concept of form makes up one of the central aspects of Aristotle's philosophy. For quite some time however there has been discord over just exactly what Aristotle wanted to have understood by this. The suggestions range from the identification of the form with the kind, right up to the assertion that they are on the contrary something individual, meaning that Socrates' form would be a different one to that of Plato. The focus of the dispute centers on the "Met. Z, H, " books. Although the reason for this is well-founded (because the theory of form, and therefore Aristotle's ontology, reach their pinnacle therein), their prerequisite wealth is however often underestimated. Andreas Gasser thus attempts to trace the development of the concept of matter from the early category script up to its definitive modification through the introduction of the complementary subject of matter in the first Physics book and thereby to pave the way for a new interpretation of the Met. Z, H, .
Autorentext
Geboren 1977; 1999-2007 Studium der Philosophie und Soziologie; seit 2007 Mitarbeit am Projekt Alcuin (www.alcuin.de); seit 2008 Dozent an der Universität Regensburg; 2013 Promotion in Philosophie; derzeit Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Lehrstuhl für Geschichte der Philosophie der Universität Regensburg.
Titel
Form und Materie bei Aristoteles
Untertitel
Vorarbeiten zu einer Interpretation der Substanzbücher
Autor
EAN
9783161537158
ISBN
978-3-16-153715-8
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Herausgeber
Genre
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
3.28 MB
Anzahl Seiten
355
Jahr
2015
Untertitel
Deutsch
Lesemotiv
Unerwartete Verzögerung
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