Happy New Year! Get 10% off all books on our website throughout January! Discount will be applied automatically at checkout.

Simplicius: On Aristotle Categories 7-8

Barrie Fleet author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:10th Apr '14

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Simplicius: On Aristotle Categories 7-8 cover

A translation of Simplicius' philosophical commentary on the Aristotle's Categories 7-8, with extensive commentary notes, introduction and indexes.

In "Categories" chapters 7 and 8 Aristotle considers his third and fourth categories - those of Relative and Quality. This text provides a translation of Simplicius' commentary on "Categories".In Categories chapters 7 and 8 Aristotle considers his third and fourth categories - those of Relative and Quality. Critics of Aristotle had suggested for each of the non-substance categories that they could really be reduced to relatives, so it is important how the category of Relative is defined. Aristotle offers two definitions, and the second, stricter, one is often cited by his defenders in order to rule out objections. The second definition of relative involves the idea of something changing its relationship through a change undergone by its correlate, not by itself. There were disagreements as to whether this was genuine change, and Plotinus discussed whether relatives exist only in the mind, without being real. The terms used by Aristotle for such relationships was 'being disposed relatively to something', a term later borrowed by the Stoics for their fourth category, and perhaps originating in Plato's Academy. In his discussion of Quality, Aristotle reports a debate on whether justice admits of degrees, or whether only the possession of justice does so. Simplicius reports the further development of this controversy in terms of whether justice admits a range or latitude (platos). This debate helped to inspire the medieval idea of latitude of forms, which goes back much further than is commonly recognised - at least to Plato and Aristotle.

ISBN: 9781472557346

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 345g

240 pages