Aristotle's Four Causes
Boris Hennig
This book examines Aristotle’s four causes (material, formal, efficient, and final), offering a systematic discussion of the relation between form and matter, causation, taxonomy, and teleology. The overall aim is to show that the four causes form a system, so that the form of a natural thing relates to its matter as the final cause of a natural process relates to its efficient cause. Aristotle’s Four Causes reaches two novel and distinctive conclusions. The first is that the formal cause or essence of a natural thing is not a property of this thing but a generic natural thing. The second is that the final cause of a process is not its purpose but the course that processes of its kind typically take.
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- New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Oxford, Wien, 2019. X, 280 pp.
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Causes and Becauses
- Things to Keep in Mind
- The Introductory Chapters Introduced
- The Causes in More Detail
- Chapter 1. Aristotle’s Four Causes
- 1.1 Natural Processes
- 1.2 That Out of Which the Thing Comes to Be
- 1.3 What the Thing Comes to Be
- 1.4 Whence the Process Comes to Occur
- 1.5 What the Process Turns Into
- 1.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 2. Two Epistemic Directions of Fit
- 2.1 Archetypes and Ectypes
- 2.2 How to Talk
- 2.3 Sellarsian Sentences
- 2.4 Affection and Function
- 2.5 A Priori Knowledge
- 2.6 Aristotle’s Four Causes
- Chapter 3. Tode, Ti, Toionde
- 3.1 What Is Matter?
- 3.2 The Pale and the Dead Socrates
- 3.3 On Denuding
- 3.4 Tode Ti
- 3.5 The Timaeus
- 3.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 4. The Inseparability of Matter
- 4.1 Matter as Attribute
- 4.2 Matter as Subject
- 4.3 Matter as Potential
- 4.4 Sameness and Difference of Thing and Matter
- 4.5 Alteration vs. Completion
- 4.6 A Note on Material Constitution
- Chapter 5. Types and Classes
- 5.1 Sets and Classes
- 5.2 Polytypic Classes and Clusters
- 5.3 The Type Specimen Method
- 5.4 Two Species Concepts
- 5.5 Standards of Typicality
- 5.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 6. Essences vs. Properties
- 6.1 One Property to Rule Them All
- 6.2 Essence and Explanation
- 6.3 Essences, Properties, and Essential Properties
- 6.4 Sortals and Natural Kinds
- 6.5 Identifying, Classifying, Describing
- 6.6 Another Take on Metaphysics Ζ 13
- Chapter 7. Causation
- 7.1 Causation as a Relation
- 7.2 Hume’s Argument
- 7.3 Water and Suffocation
- 7.4 Three Objections and Replies
- 7.5 Dispositionalism
- 7.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 8. Causal Processes
- 8.1 Causal Processes
- 8.2 “Cause” as a Dimension Word
- 8.3 Aronson’s Formula
- 8.4 A Note on Diagrams
- 8.5 Types and Handles
- 8.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 9. Basic and Derived Final Causes
- 9.1 Final Causes as Limits
- 9.2 The Typical and the Best
- 9.3 Remote Final Causes
- 9.4 External Final Causes
- 9.5 An Example
- 9.6 Reducing Final Causes
- Chapter 10. Teleological Reasoning
- 10.1 The Action as Conclusion
- 10.2 Inference Rules
- 10.3 Mirroring Speculative Reasoning
- 10.4 Natural Teleology
- 10.5 Functions
- 10.6 Conclusion
- Conclusion
- The Material Cause
- Essences
- The Formal Cause
- The Efficient Cause
- The Final Cause
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 8. Causal Processes
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Or login to access all content.- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- About the author
- About the book
- This eBook can be cited
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Causes and Becauses
- Things to Keep in Mind
- The Introductory Chapters Introduced
- The Causes in More Detail
- Chapter 1. Aristotle’s Four Causes
- 1.1 Natural Processes
- 1.2 That Out of Which the Thing Comes to Be
- 1.3 What the Thing Comes to Be
- 1.4 Whence the Process Comes to Occur
- 1.5 What the Process Turns Into
- 1.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 2. Two Epistemic Directions of Fit
- 2.1 Archetypes and Ectypes
- 2.2 How to Talk
- 2.3 Sellarsian Sentences
- 2.4 Affection and Function
- 2.5 A Priori Knowledge
- 2.6 Aristotle’s Four Causes
- Chapter 3. Tode, Ti, Toionde
- 3.1 What Is Matter?
- 3.2 The Pale and the Dead Socrates
- 3.3 On Denuding
- 3.4 Tode Ti
- 3.5 The Timaeus
- 3.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 4. The Inseparability of Matter
- 4.1 Matter as Attribute
- 4.2 Matter as Subject
- 4.3 Matter as Potential
- 4.4 Sameness and Difference of Thing and Matter
- 4.5 Alteration vs. Completion
- 4.6 A Note on Material Constitution
- Chapter 5. Types and Classes
- 5.1 Sets and Classes
- 5.2 Polytypic Classes and Clusters
- 5.3 The Type Specimen Method
- 5.4 Two Species Concepts
- 5.5 Standards of Typicality
- 5.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 6. Essences vs. Properties
- 6.1 One Property to Rule Them All
- 6.2 Essence and Explanation
- 6.3 Essences, Properties, and Essential Properties
- 6.4 Sortals and Natural Kinds
- 6.5 Identifying, Classifying, Describing
- 6.6 Another Take on Metaphysics Ζ 13
- Chapter 7. Causation
- 7.1 Causation as a Relation
- 7.2 Hume’s Argument
- 7.3 Water and Suffocation
- 7.4 Three Objections and Replies
- 7.5 Dispositionalism
- 7.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 8. Causal Processes
- 8.1 Causal Processes
- 8.2 “Cause” as a Dimension Word
- 8.3 Aronson’s Formula
- 8.4 A Note on Diagrams
- 8.5 Types and Handles
- 8.6 Conclusion
- Chapter 9. Basic and Derived Final Causes
- 9.1 Final Causes as Limits
- 9.2 The Typical and the Best
- 9.3 Remote Final Causes
- 9.4 External Final Causes
- 9.5 An Example
- 9.6 Reducing Final Causes
- Chapter 10. Teleological Reasoning
- 10.1 The Action as Conclusion
- 10.2 Inference Rules
- 10.3 Mirroring Speculative Reasoning
- 10.4 Natural Teleology
- 10.5 Functions
- 10.6 Conclusion
- Conclusion
- The Material Cause
- Essences
- The Formal Cause
- The Efficient Cause
- The Final Cause
- Bibliography
- Index