Aristotle's de Motu Animalium: Symposium Aristotelicum
The Symposium Aristotelicum volumes have become essential reference works for the study of Aristotle. In this twentieth volume, ten renowned scholars of ancient philosophy offer a running commentary on Aristotle's De Motu Animalium, with a new Greek text and translation
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
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Oxford
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2020
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Zusammenfassung: | The Symposium Aristotelicum volumes have become essential reference works for the study of Aristotle. In this twentieth volume, ten renowned scholars of ancient philosophy offer a running commentary on Aristotle's De Motu Animalium, with a new Greek text and translation |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (577 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9780192572493 |
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505 | 8 | |a Cover -- Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: Symposium Aristotelicum -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction Part I: The Argument of De Motu Animalium -- 1. Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: its Topic and Purpose -- 2. The Structure of De Motu Animalium -- 3. Authenticity -- 4. The Chronology of the De Motu Animalium -- 5. Incompatibility of the De Motu Animalium with the Psychology of De Anima? -- 6. The Seemingly Unrelated Appearance of the Connate Pneuma in MA 10 -- 7. The MA: an Interdisciplinary Inquiry? -- 8. The Explanandum of the Common Cause -- 9. Mechanical and Bio-Kinematical Assumptions -- 10. The Practical Syllogism -- 11. The Role of Phantasia -- 12. Desire and Affections -- 13. Self-Movers and Unmoved Movers -- Introduction Part II: The Text -of De Motu Animalium -- 1. The Key Passage: MA 6, 700b17-25 -- 2. P's Reading of 700b23-24: a Byzantine Conjecture? -- 3. Jaeger 1913: Two Manuscript Families and One Open Question -- 4. Torraca 1958: William of Moerbeke and Cod. Vaticanus P -- 5. Wartelle 1963: the First List of MA Manuscripts -- 6. Louis 1973: an Intuition-but No Evidence -- 7. Nussbaum 1975: the Lost 'Majuscule MS' -- 8. De Leemans 2011: William's Two Models and a New Group of Greek Mss. -- 9. On the Eve of the 2011 Symposium -- 10. A Final Challenge: Escobar 1990 on De Insomniis -- 11. Primavesi 2011: a New Hyparchetype -- 12. Back to Andronicus: Second Thoughts on 700b17-25 -- 13. Isépy 2013 on the Greek Models of the Two Mediaeval Translations -- 14. Koch 2015 on Michael of Ephesus -- 15. A New Stemma of the Independent Tradition -- 16. The New Text, its Three Apparatus, and the English Translation -- Appendix I: the Forty-Seven Known Greek Manuscripts of MA -- Appendix II: The principal manuscrips of William's translation and their affiliation to De Leemans 2011a -- Appendix III: 120 Divergences (Primavesi 2020 | Nussbaum 1978) | |
505 | 8 | |a Appendix IV: How to Account for the Readings of Berolinensis Be in De Insomniis? -- A New Critical Edition of the Greek Text: With an English Translation -- Sigla -- 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 2 -- 3 -- 3 -- 4 -- 4 -- 5 -- 6 -- 5 -- 6 -- 7 -- 7 -- 8 -- 8 -- 9 -- 9 -- 10 -- 10 -- 11 -- 11 -- Apparatvs Plenior -- Titvlvs -- I -- II -- Textvs -- Caput 1 -- Caput 2 -- Caput 3 -- Caput 4 -- Caput 5 -- Caput 6 -- Caput 7 -- Caput 8 -- Caput 9 -- Caput 10 -- Caput 11 -- Chapter I: The Inner Resting Point and the Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 1. Introductory Remarks -- 2. The Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 3. More General Claims on Self-Movers and the Unmoved -- 4. The Animal's Inner Resting Points -- 5. Aristotle on the Main Message of MA 1 -- Chapter II: Animal and Celestial Motion: the Role of an External Springboard -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Precondition for Animal Self-Movement: There Must be Something at Rest that is External to the Animal -- 3. The Example of the Boat -- 4. The Movement of the Universe: Aristotle's Initial Question in MA 3 -- 5. Aristotle's Strategy for Answering this Question -- 6. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was a Part of the Heavenly Sphere? -- 7. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was in the Sphere but Not a Part of it? -- 8. Aristotle's Response to the Atlas Story -- 9. General Considerations about Relative Strength -- 10. The Application of these Considerations to the Atlas Story -- 11. Aristotle's Conclusion: on this Story, the Earth Could Not Remain Stationary -- 12. Conclusion -- Chapter III: Completing the Argument that Locomotion Requires an External and Unmoved Mover -- 1. The Story So Far -- 2. Chapter 4 -- 3. Chapter 5 -- 4. Conclusion -- Chapter IV: Resuming Discussion of the Common Cause of Animal Self-Motion: How Does the Soul Move the Body? | |
505 | 8 | |a 1. Context: the Discussion of the Principle of Animal Self-Motion in De Anima III 9-11 -- 2. Section I, 700b4-16: Resuming the Theory of Animal Locomotion -- 3. Section II, 700b17-25: Introducing the Moving Factors in the Animal -- 4. Section III, 700b25-35: the Teleological Structure of Animal and Celestial Locomotion -- 5. Section IV, 700b35-701a6: Pinning Down the Causal Structure of Animal Locomotion -- 6. Conclusion -- Chapter V: The Role of Thought in Animal Voluntary Self-Locomotion -- 1. Introduction: MA 7, 701a7-b1 in its Context -- 2. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (1): 'Simple' Actions -- 3. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (2): 'Complex' Actions -- 4. Thought, Together with Desire, as the Cause of Action -- 5. De Motu Animalium vs. De Anima on Thought and Desire as Causes of Self-Locomotion -- Chapter VI: Aristotle and the Mechanics of Desire -- 1. The Sources of Movement -- 2. L'Homme Machine? -- 3. The Law of Desire -- 4. The Constant Heart -- 5. The Phantom of Liberty? -- 6. That Obscure Object of Desire -- 7. Goals and Goods, Autonomy and Indifference -- 8. Conclusions -- Chapter VII: The Origin and the Instrument of Animal Motion -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Middle Part of the Body (Chapter 9, Part One: 702b12-25) -- 3. The Absolute Origin of Animal Motion (Chapter 9, Part Two: 702b25-703a3) -- 4. The Instrument of Animal Motion (Chapter 10, Part One: 703a4-28) -- 5. The City Analogy (Chapter 10, Part Two: 703a28-b2) -- Chapter VIII: Voluntary or Not? The Physiological Perspective -- 1. The Place of MA 11 in the MA -- 2. The Physiological Characterization of Motions -- 3. Alteration and Reaction: the Shared Explanatory Framework -- 4. Physiological Definition and Ethical Definition -- 5. Conclusion -- Chapter IX: Articulating the De Motu Animalium -- 1. Programmatic Statements -- 2. The Unity of the Treatise | |
505 | 8 | |a 3. Raising the Question of Locomotion in the De Anima -- 4. De An. Summarizes MA (III 10, 433b21-28) -- 5. Ancient Commentators on de An. III 10, 433b21-27 -- 6. Is Hylomorphism at Stake? -- Appendix: Ancient Commentaries on Aristotle's de An. III 10, 433b21-28 -- Bibliography -- Index Locorum -- Index of Names | |
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contents | Cover -- Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: Symposium Aristotelicum -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction Part I: The Argument of De Motu Animalium -- 1. Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: its Topic and Purpose -- 2. The Structure of De Motu Animalium -- 3. Authenticity -- 4. The Chronology of the De Motu Animalium -- 5. Incompatibility of the De Motu Animalium with the Psychology of De Anima? -- 6. The Seemingly Unrelated Appearance of the Connate Pneuma in MA 10 -- 7. The MA: an Interdisciplinary Inquiry? -- 8. The Explanandum of the Common Cause -- 9. Mechanical and Bio-Kinematical Assumptions -- 10. The Practical Syllogism -- 11. The Role of Phantasia -- 12. Desire and Affections -- 13. Self-Movers and Unmoved Movers -- Introduction Part II: The Text -of De Motu Animalium -- 1. The Key Passage: MA 6, 700b17-25 -- 2. P's Reading of 700b23-24: a Byzantine Conjecture? -- 3. Jaeger 1913: Two Manuscript Families and One Open Question -- 4. Torraca 1958: William of Moerbeke and Cod. Vaticanus P -- 5. Wartelle 1963: the First List of MA Manuscripts -- 6. Louis 1973: an Intuition-but No Evidence -- 7. Nussbaum 1975: the Lost 'Majuscule MS' -- 8. De Leemans 2011: William's Two Models and a New Group of Greek Mss. -- 9. On the Eve of the 2011 Symposium -- 10. A Final Challenge: Escobar 1990 on De Insomniis -- 11. Primavesi 2011: a New Hyparchetype -- 12. Back to Andronicus: Second Thoughts on 700b17-25 -- 13. Isépy 2013 on the Greek Models of the Two Mediaeval Translations -- 14. Koch 2015 on Michael of Ephesus -- 15. A New Stemma of the Independent Tradition -- 16. The New Text, its Three Apparatus, and the English Translation -- Appendix I: the Forty-Seven Known Greek Manuscripts of MA -- Appendix II: The principal manuscrips of William's translation and their affiliation to De Leemans 2011a -- Appendix III: 120 Divergences (Primavesi 2020 | Nussbaum 1978) Appendix IV: How to Account for the Readings of Berolinensis Be in De Insomniis? -- A New Critical Edition of the Greek Text: With an English Translation -- Sigla -- 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 2 -- 3 -- 3 -- 4 -- 4 -- 5 -- 6 -- 5 -- 6 -- 7 -- 7 -- 8 -- 8 -- 9 -- 9 -- 10 -- 10 -- 11 -- 11 -- Apparatvs Plenior -- Titvlvs -- I -- II -- Textvs -- Caput 1 -- Caput 2 -- Caput 3 -- Caput 4 -- Caput 5 -- Caput 6 -- Caput 7 -- Caput 8 -- Caput 9 -- Caput 10 -- Caput 11 -- Chapter I: The Inner Resting Point and the Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 1. Introductory Remarks -- 2. The Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 3. More General Claims on Self-Movers and the Unmoved -- 4. The Animal's Inner Resting Points -- 5. Aristotle on the Main Message of MA 1 -- Chapter II: Animal and Celestial Motion: the Role of an External Springboard -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Precondition for Animal Self-Movement: There Must be Something at Rest that is External to the Animal -- 3. The Example of the Boat -- 4. The Movement of the Universe: Aristotle's Initial Question in MA 3 -- 5. Aristotle's Strategy for Answering this Question -- 6. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was a Part of the Heavenly Sphere? -- 7. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was in the Sphere but Not a Part of it? -- 8. Aristotle's Response to the Atlas Story -- 9. General Considerations about Relative Strength -- 10. The Application of these Considerations to the Atlas Story -- 11. Aristotle's Conclusion: on this Story, the Earth Could Not Remain Stationary -- 12. Conclusion -- Chapter III: Completing the Argument that Locomotion Requires an External and Unmoved Mover -- 1. The Story So Far -- 2. Chapter 4 -- 3. Chapter 5 -- 4. Conclusion -- Chapter IV: Resuming Discussion of the Common Cause of Animal Self-Motion: How Does the Soul Move the Body? 1. Context: the Discussion of the Principle of Animal Self-Motion in De Anima III 9-11 -- 2. Section I, 700b4-16: Resuming the Theory of Animal Locomotion -- 3. Section II, 700b17-25: Introducing the Moving Factors in the Animal -- 4. Section III, 700b25-35: the Teleological Structure of Animal and Celestial Locomotion -- 5. Section IV, 700b35-701a6: Pinning Down the Causal Structure of Animal Locomotion -- 6. Conclusion -- Chapter V: The Role of Thought in Animal Voluntary Self-Locomotion -- 1. Introduction: MA 7, 701a7-b1 in its Context -- 2. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (1): 'Simple' Actions -- 3. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (2): 'Complex' Actions -- 4. Thought, Together with Desire, as the Cause of Action -- 5. De Motu Animalium vs. De Anima on Thought and Desire as Causes of Self-Locomotion -- Chapter VI: Aristotle and the Mechanics of Desire -- 1. The Sources of Movement -- 2. L'Homme Machine? -- 3. The Law of Desire -- 4. The Constant Heart -- 5. The Phantom of Liberty? -- 6. That Obscure Object of Desire -- 7. Goals and Goods, Autonomy and Indifference -- 8. Conclusions -- Chapter VII: The Origin and the Instrument of Animal Motion -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Middle Part of the Body (Chapter 9, Part One: 702b12-25) -- 3. The Absolute Origin of Animal Motion (Chapter 9, Part Two: 702b25-703a3) -- 4. The Instrument of Animal Motion (Chapter 10, Part One: 703a4-28) -- 5. The City Analogy (Chapter 10, Part Two: 703a28-b2) -- Chapter VIII: Voluntary or Not? The Physiological Perspective -- 1. The Place of MA 11 in the MA -- 2. The Physiological Characterization of Motions -- 3. Alteration and Reaction: the Shared Explanatory Framework -- 4. Physiological Definition and Ethical Definition -- 5. Conclusion -- Chapter IX: Articulating the De Motu Animalium -- 1. Programmatic Statements -- 2. The Unity of the Treatise 3. Raising the Question of Locomotion in the De Anima -- 4. De An. Summarizes MA (III 10, 433b21-28) -- 5. Ancient Commentators on de An. III 10, 433b21-27 -- 6. Is Hylomorphism at Stake? -- Appendix: Ancient Commentaries on Aristotle's de An. III 10, 433b21-28 -- Bibliography -- Index Locorum -- Index of Names |
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discipline_str_mv | Philosophie Philologie / Byzantinistik / Neulatein |
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Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: its Topic and Purpose -- 2. The Structure of De Motu Animalium -- 3. Authenticity -- 4. The Chronology of the De Motu Animalium -- 5. Incompatibility of the De Motu Animalium with the Psychology of De Anima? -- 6. The Seemingly Unrelated Appearance of the Connate Pneuma in MA 10 -- 7. The MA: an Interdisciplinary Inquiry? -- 8. The Explanandum of the Common Cause -- 9. Mechanical and Bio-Kinematical Assumptions -- 10. The Practical Syllogism -- 11. The Role of Phantasia -- 12. Desire and Affections -- 13. Self-Movers and Unmoved Movers -- Introduction Part II: The Text -of De Motu Animalium -- 1. The Key Passage: MA 6, 700b17-25 -- 2. P's Reading of 700b23-24: a Byzantine Conjecture? -- 3. Jaeger 1913: Two Manuscript Families and One Open Question -- 4. Torraca 1958: William of Moerbeke and Cod. Vaticanus P -- 5. Wartelle 1963: the First List of MA Manuscripts -- 6. Louis 1973: an Intuition-but No Evidence -- 7. Nussbaum 1975: the Lost 'Majuscule MS' -- 8. De Leemans 2011: William's Two Models and a New Group of Greek Mss. -- 9. On the Eve of the 2011 Symposium -- 10. A Final Challenge: Escobar 1990 on De Insomniis -- 11. Primavesi 2011: a New Hyparchetype -- 12. Back to Andronicus: Second Thoughts on 700b17-25 -- 13. Isépy 2013 on the Greek Models of the Two Mediaeval Translations -- 14. Koch 2015 on Michael of Ephesus -- 15. A New Stemma of the Independent Tradition -- 16. The New Text, its Three Apparatus, and the English Translation -- Appendix I: the Forty-Seven Known Greek Manuscripts of MA -- Appendix II: The principal manuscrips of William's translation and their affiliation to De Leemans 2011a -- Appendix III: 120 Divergences (Primavesi 2020 | Nussbaum 1978)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Appendix IV: How to Account for the Readings of Berolinensis Be in De Insomniis? -- A New Critical Edition of the Greek Text: With an English Translation -- Sigla -- 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 2 -- 3 -- 3 -- 4 -- 4 -- 5 -- 6 -- 5 -- 6 -- 7 -- 7 -- 8 -- 8 -- 9 -- 9 -- 10 -- 10 -- 11 -- 11 -- Apparatvs Plenior -- Titvlvs -- I -- II -- Textvs -- Caput 1 -- Caput 2 -- Caput 3 -- Caput 4 -- Caput 5 -- Caput 6 -- Caput 7 -- Caput 8 -- Caput 9 -- Caput 10 -- Caput 11 -- Chapter I: The Inner Resting Point and the Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 1. Introductory Remarks -- 2. The Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 3. More General Claims on Self-Movers and the Unmoved -- 4. The Animal's Inner Resting Points -- 5. Aristotle on the Main Message of MA 1 -- Chapter II: Animal and Celestial Motion: the Role of an External Springboard -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Precondition for Animal Self-Movement: There Must be Something at Rest that is External to the Animal -- 3. The Example of the Boat -- 4. The Movement of the Universe: Aristotle's Initial Question in MA 3 -- 5. Aristotle's Strategy for Answering this Question -- 6. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was a Part of the Heavenly Sphere? -- 7. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was in the Sphere but Not a Part of it? -- 8. Aristotle's Response to the Atlas Story -- 9. General Considerations about Relative Strength -- 10. The Application of these Considerations to the Atlas Story -- 11. Aristotle's Conclusion: on this Story, the Earth Could Not Remain Stationary -- 12. Conclusion -- Chapter III: Completing the Argument that Locomotion Requires an External and Unmoved Mover -- 1. The Story So Far -- 2. Chapter 4 -- 3. Chapter 5 -- 4. Conclusion -- Chapter IV: Resuming Discussion of the Common Cause of Animal Self-Motion: How Does the Soul Move the Body?</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1. Context: the Discussion of the Principle of Animal Self-Motion in De Anima III 9-11 -- 2. Section I, 700b4-16: Resuming the Theory of Animal Locomotion -- 3. Section II, 700b17-25: Introducing the Moving Factors in the Animal -- 4. Section III, 700b25-35: the Teleological Structure of Animal and Celestial Locomotion -- 5. Section IV, 700b35-701a6: Pinning Down the Causal Structure of Animal Locomotion -- 6. Conclusion -- Chapter V: The Role of Thought in Animal Voluntary Self-Locomotion -- 1. Introduction: MA 7, 701a7-b1 in its Context -- 2. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (1): 'Simple' Actions -- 3. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (2): 'Complex' Actions -- 4. Thought, Together with Desire, as the Cause of Action -- 5. De Motu Animalium vs. De Anima on Thought and Desire as Causes of Self-Locomotion -- Chapter VI: Aristotle and the Mechanics of Desire -- 1. The Sources of Movement -- 2. L'Homme Machine? -- 3. The Law of Desire -- 4. The Constant Heart -- 5. The Phantom of Liberty? -- 6. That Obscure Object of Desire -- 7. Goals and Goods, Autonomy and Indifference -- 8. Conclusions -- Chapter VII: The Origin and the Instrument of Animal Motion -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Middle Part of the Body (Chapter 9, Part One: 702b12-25) -- 3. The Absolute Origin of Animal Motion (Chapter 9, Part Two: 702b25-703a3) -- 4. The Instrument of Animal Motion (Chapter 10, Part One: 703a4-28) -- 5. The City Analogy (Chapter 10, Part Two: 703a28-b2) -- Chapter VIII: Voluntary or Not? The Physiological Perspective -- 1. The Place of MA 11 in the MA -- 2. The Physiological Characterization of Motions -- 3. Alteration and Reaction: the Shared Explanatory Framework -- 4. Physiological Definition and Ethical Definition -- 5. Conclusion -- Chapter IX: Articulating the De Motu Animalium -- 1. Programmatic Statements -- 2. The Unity of the Treatise</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">3. Raising the Question of Locomotion in the De Anima -- 4. De An. Summarizes MA (III 10, 433b21-28) -- 5. Ancient Commentators on de An. III 10, 433b21-27 -- 6. Is Hylomorphism at Stake? -- Appendix: Ancient Commentaries on Aristotle's de An. III 10, 433b21-28 -- Bibliography -- Index Locorum -- Index of Names</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1="3" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The Symposium Aristotelicum volumes have become essential reference works for the study of Aristotle. 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genre_facet | Konferenzschrift |
id | DE-604.BV048934844 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T21:58:07Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:50:20Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780192572493 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034198713 |
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physical | 1 Online-Ressource (577 Seiten) |
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publishDate | 2020 |
publishDateSearch | 2020 |
publishDateSort | 2020 |
publisher | Oxford University Press, Incorporated |
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spelling | Rapp, Christof Verfasser aut Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum Oxford Oxford University Press, Incorporated 2020 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (577 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Cover -- Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: Symposium Aristotelicum -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction Part I: The Argument of De Motu Animalium -- 1. Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: its Topic and Purpose -- 2. The Structure of De Motu Animalium -- 3. Authenticity -- 4. The Chronology of the De Motu Animalium -- 5. Incompatibility of the De Motu Animalium with the Psychology of De Anima? -- 6. The Seemingly Unrelated Appearance of the Connate Pneuma in MA 10 -- 7. The MA: an Interdisciplinary Inquiry? -- 8. The Explanandum of the Common Cause -- 9. Mechanical and Bio-Kinematical Assumptions -- 10. The Practical Syllogism -- 11. The Role of Phantasia -- 12. Desire and Affections -- 13. Self-Movers and Unmoved Movers -- Introduction Part II: The Text -of De Motu Animalium -- 1. The Key Passage: MA 6, 700b17-25 -- 2. P's Reading of 700b23-24: a Byzantine Conjecture? -- 3. Jaeger 1913: Two Manuscript Families and One Open Question -- 4. Torraca 1958: William of Moerbeke and Cod. Vaticanus P -- 5. Wartelle 1963: the First List of MA Manuscripts -- 6. Louis 1973: an Intuition-but No Evidence -- 7. Nussbaum 1975: the Lost 'Majuscule MS' -- 8. De Leemans 2011: William's Two Models and a New Group of Greek Mss. -- 9. On the Eve of the 2011 Symposium -- 10. A Final Challenge: Escobar 1990 on De Insomniis -- 11. Primavesi 2011: a New Hyparchetype -- 12. Back to Andronicus: Second Thoughts on 700b17-25 -- 13. Isépy 2013 on the Greek Models of the Two Mediaeval Translations -- 14. Koch 2015 on Michael of Ephesus -- 15. A New Stemma of the Independent Tradition -- 16. The New Text, its Three Apparatus, and the English Translation -- Appendix I: the Forty-Seven Known Greek Manuscripts of MA -- Appendix II: The principal manuscrips of William's translation and their affiliation to De Leemans 2011a -- Appendix III: 120 Divergences (Primavesi 2020 | Nussbaum 1978) Appendix IV: How to Account for the Readings of Berolinensis Be in De Insomniis? -- A New Critical Edition of the Greek Text: With an English Translation -- Sigla -- 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 2 -- 3 -- 3 -- 4 -- 4 -- 5 -- 6 -- 5 -- 6 -- 7 -- 7 -- 8 -- 8 -- 9 -- 9 -- 10 -- 10 -- 11 -- 11 -- Apparatvs Plenior -- Titvlvs -- I -- II -- Textvs -- Caput 1 -- Caput 2 -- Caput 3 -- Caput 4 -- Caput 5 -- Caput 6 -- Caput 7 -- Caput 8 -- Caput 9 -- Caput 10 -- Caput 11 -- Chapter I: The Inner Resting Point and the Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 1. Introductory Remarks -- 2. The Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 3. More General Claims on Self-Movers and the Unmoved -- 4. The Animal's Inner Resting Points -- 5. Aristotle on the Main Message of MA 1 -- Chapter II: Animal and Celestial Motion: the Role of an External Springboard -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Precondition for Animal Self-Movement: There Must be Something at Rest that is External to the Animal -- 3. The Example of the Boat -- 4. The Movement of the Universe: Aristotle's Initial Question in MA 3 -- 5. Aristotle's Strategy for Answering this Question -- 6. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was a Part of the Heavenly Sphere? -- 7. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was in the Sphere but Not a Part of it? -- 8. Aristotle's Response to the Atlas Story -- 9. General Considerations about Relative Strength -- 10. The Application of these Considerations to the Atlas Story -- 11. Aristotle's Conclusion: on this Story, the Earth Could Not Remain Stationary -- 12. Conclusion -- Chapter III: Completing the Argument that Locomotion Requires an External and Unmoved Mover -- 1. The Story So Far -- 2. Chapter 4 -- 3. Chapter 5 -- 4. Conclusion -- Chapter IV: Resuming Discussion of the Common Cause of Animal Self-Motion: How Does the Soul Move the Body? 1. Context: the Discussion of the Principle of Animal Self-Motion in De Anima III 9-11 -- 2. Section I, 700b4-16: Resuming the Theory of Animal Locomotion -- 3. Section II, 700b17-25: Introducing the Moving Factors in the Animal -- 4. Section III, 700b25-35: the Teleological Structure of Animal and Celestial Locomotion -- 5. Section IV, 700b35-701a6: Pinning Down the Causal Structure of Animal Locomotion -- 6. Conclusion -- Chapter V: The Role of Thought in Animal Voluntary Self-Locomotion -- 1. Introduction: MA 7, 701a7-b1 in its Context -- 2. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (1): 'Simple' Actions -- 3. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (2): 'Complex' Actions -- 4. Thought, Together with Desire, as the Cause of Action -- 5. De Motu Animalium vs. De Anima on Thought and Desire as Causes of Self-Locomotion -- Chapter VI: Aristotle and the Mechanics of Desire -- 1. The Sources of Movement -- 2. L'Homme Machine? -- 3. The Law of Desire -- 4. The Constant Heart -- 5. The Phantom of Liberty? -- 6. That Obscure Object of Desire -- 7. Goals and Goods, Autonomy and Indifference -- 8. Conclusions -- Chapter VII: The Origin and the Instrument of Animal Motion -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Middle Part of the Body (Chapter 9, Part One: 702b12-25) -- 3. The Absolute Origin of Animal Motion (Chapter 9, Part Two: 702b25-703a3) -- 4. The Instrument of Animal Motion (Chapter 10, Part One: 703a4-28) -- 5. The City Analogy (Chapter 10, Part Two: 703a28-b2) -- Chapter VIII: Voluntary or Not? The Physiological Perspective -- 1. The Place of MA 11 in the MA -- 2. The Physiological Characterization of Motions -- 3. Alteration and Reaction: the Shared Explanatory Framework -- 4. Physiological Definition and Ethical Definition -- 5. Conclusion -- Chapter IX: Articulating the De Motu Animalium -- 1. Programmatic Statements -- 2. The Unity of the Treatise 3. Raising the Question of Locomotion in the De Anima -- 4. De An. Summarizes MA (III 10, 433b21-28) -- 5. Ancient Commentators on de An. III 10, 433b21-27 -- 6. Is Hylomorphism at Stake? -- Appendix: Ancient Commentaries on Aristotle's de An. III 10, 433b21-28 -- Bibliography -- Index Locorum -- Index of Names The Symposium Aristotelicum volumes have become essential reference works for the study of Aristotle. In this twentieth volume, ten renowned scholars of ancient philosophy offer a running commentary on Aristotle's De Motu Animalium, with a new Greek text and translation Aristoteles v384-v322 De motu animalium (DE-588)4211171-7 gnd rswk-swf Aristotle.-De motu animalium Electronic books (DE-588)1071861417 Konferenzschrift gnd-content Aristoteles v384-v322 De motu animalium (DE-588)4211171-7 u DE-604 Primavesi, Oliver Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Rapp, Christof Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Oxford : Oxford University Press, Incorporated,c2020 9780198835561 |
spellingShingle | Rapp, Christof Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum Cover -- Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: Symposium Aristotelicum -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction Part I: The Argument of De Motu Animalium -- 1. Aristotle's De Motu Animalium: its Topic and Purpose -- 2. The Structure of De Motu Animalium -- 3. Authenticity -- 4. The Chronology of the De Motu Animalium -- 5. Incompatibility of the De Motu Animalium with the Psychology of De Anima? -- 6. The Seemingly Unrelated Appearance of the Connate Pneuma in MA 10 -- 7. The MA: an Interdisciplinary Inquiry? -- 8. The Explanandum of the Common Cause -- 9. Mechanical and Bio-Kinematical Assumptions -- 10. The Practical Syllogism -- 11. The Role of Phantasia -- 12. Desire and Affections -- 13. Self-Movers and Unmoved Movers -- Introduction Part II: The Text -of De Motu Animalium -- 1. The Key Passage: MA 6, 700b17-25 -- 2. P's Reading of 700b23-24: a Byzantine Conjecture? -- 3. Jaeger 1913: Two Manuscript Families and One Open Question -- 4. Torraca 1958: William of Moerbeke and Cod. Vaticanus P -- 5. Wartelle 1963: the First List of MA Manuscripts -- 6. Louis 1973: an Intuition-but No Evidence -- 7. Nussbaum 1975: the Lost 'Majuscule MS' -- 8. De Leemans 2011: William's Two Models and a New Group of Greek Mss. -- 9. On the Eve of the 2011 Symposium -- 10. A Final Challenge: Escobar 1990 on De Insomniis -- 11. Primavesi 2011: a New Hyparchetype -- 12. Back to Andronicus: Second Thoughts on 700b17-25 -- 13. Isépy 2013 on the Greek Models of the Two Mediaeval Translations -- 14. Koch 2015 on Michael of Ephesus -- 15. A New Stemma of the Independent Tradition -- 16. The New Text, its Three Apparatus, and the English Translation -- Appendix I: the Forty-Seven Known Greek Manuscripts of MA -- Appendix II: The principal manuscrips of William's translation and their affiliation to De Leemans 2011a -- Appendix III: 120 Divergences (Primavesi 2020 | Nussbaum 1978) Appendix IV: How to Account for the Readings of Berolinensis Be in De Insomniis? -- A New Critical Edition of the Greek Text: With an English Translation -- Sigla -- 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 2 -- 3 -- 3 -- 4 -- 4 -- 5 -- 6 -- 5 -- 6 -- 7 -- 7 -- 8 -- 8 -- 9 -- 9 -- 10 -- 10 -- 11 -- 11 -- Apparatvs Plenior -- Titvlvs -- I -- II -- Textvs -- Caput 1 -- Caput 2 -- Caput 3 -- Caput 4 -- Caput 5 -- Caput 6 -- Caput 7 -- Caput 8 -- Caput 9 -- Caput 10 -- Caput 11 -- Chapter I: The Inner Resting Point and the Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 1. Introductory Remarks -- 2. The Common Cause of Animal Motion -- 3. More General Claims on Self-Movers and the Unmoved -- 4. The Animal's Inner Resting Points -- 5. Aristotle on the Main Message of MA 1 -- Chapter II: Animal and Celestial Motion: the Role of an External Springboard -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Precondition for Animal Self-Movement: There Must be Something at Rest that is External to the Animal -- 3. The Example of the Boat -- 4. The Movement of the Universe: Aristotle's Initial Question in MA 3 -- 5. Aristotle's Strategy for Answering this Question -- 6. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was a Part of the Heavenly Sphere? -- 7. Could there be an Unmoved Mover that was in the Sphere but Not a Part of it? -- 8. Aristotle's Response to the Atlas Story -- 9. General Considerations about Relative Strength -- 10. The Application of these Considerations to the Atlas Story -- 11. Aristotle's Conclusion: on this Story, the Earth Could Not Remain Stationary -- 12. Conclusion -- Chapter III: Completing the Argument that Locomotion Requires an External and Unmoved Mover -- 1. The Story So Far -- 2. Chapter 4 -- 3. Chapter 5 -- 4. Conclusion -- Chapter IV: Resuming Discussion of the Common Cause of Animal Self-Motion: How Does the Soul Move the Body? 1. Context: the Discussion of the Principle of Animal Self-Motion in De Anima III 9-11 -- 2. Section I, 700b4-16: Resuming the Theory of Animal Locomotion -- 3. Section II, 700b17-25: Introducing the Moving Factors in the Animal -- 4. Section III, 700b25-35: the Teleological Structure of Animal and Celestial Locomotion -- 5. Section IV, 700b35-701a6: Pinning Down the Causal Structure of Animal Locomotion -- 6. Conclusion -- Chapter V: The Role of Thought in Animal Voluntary Self-Locomotion -- 1. Introduction: MA 7, 701a7-b1 in its Context -- 2. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (1): 'Simple' Actions -- 3. How Thought Moves Animals to Action (2): 'Complex' Actions -- 4. Thought, Together with Desire, as the Cause of Action -- 5. De Motu Animalium vs. De Anima on Thought and Desire as Causes of Self-Locomotion -- Chapter VI: Aristotle and the Mechanics of Desire -- 1. The Sources of Movement -- 2. L'Homme Machine? -- 3. The Law of Desire -- 4. The Constant Heart -- 5. The Phantom of Liberty? -- 6. That Obscure Object of Desire -- 7. Goals and Goods, Autonomy and Indifference -- 8. Conclusions -- Chapter VII: The Origin and the Instrument of Animal Motion -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Middle Part of the Body (Chapter 9, Part One: 702b12-25) -- 3. The Absolute Origin of Animal Motion (Chapter 9, Part Two: 702b25-703a3) -- 4. The Instrument of Animal Motion (Chapter 10, Part One: 703a4-28) -- 5. The City Analogy (Chapter 10, Part Two: 703a28-b2) -- Chapter VIII: Voluntary or Not? The Physiological Perspective -- 1. The Place of MA 11 in the MA -- 2. The Physiological Characterization of Motions -- 3. Alteration and Reaction: the Shared Explanatory Framework -- 4. Physiological Definition and Ethical Definition -- 5. Conclusion -- Chapter IX: Articulating the De Motu Animalium -- 1. Programmatic Statements -- 2. The Unity of the Treatise 3. Raising the Question of Locomotion in the De Anima -- 4. De An. Summarizes MA (III 10, 433b21-28) -- 5. Ancient Commentators on de An. III 10, 433b21-27 -- 6. Is Hylomorphism at Stake? -- Appendix: Ancient Commentaries on Aristotle's de An. III 10, 433b21-28 -- Bibliography -- Index Locorum -- Index of Names Aristoteles v384-v322 De motu animalium (DE-588)4211171-7 gnd Aristotle.-De motu animalium |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4211171-7 (DE-588)1071861417 |
title | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_auth | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_exact_search | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_exact_search_txtP | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_full | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_fullStr | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_full_unstemmed | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium Symposium Aristotelicum |
title_short | Aristotle's de Motu Animalium |
title_sort | aristotle s de motu animalium symposium aristotelicum |
title_sub | Symposium Aristotelicum |
topic | Aristoteles v384-v322 De motu animalium (DE-588)4211171-7 gnd Aristotle.-De motu animalium |
topic_facet | Aristoteles v384-v322 De motu animalium Aristotle.-De motu animalium Konferenzschrift |
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