Article ID: CBB494981363

From Dunamis as Active/Passive Capacity to Dunamis as Nature in Aristotle’s Metaphysics Theta (2023)

unapi

Aristotle notoriously begins his examination of being in the sense of dunamis and energeia in Metaphysics Theta with what he describes as the sense that is ‘most dominant’ but not useful for his present aim. He proceeds to define the not-useful sense of dunamis as “the principle of change in something else or in itself qua other”, along with other senses derived from this primary sense. But what then is the useful sense? All that Aristotle tells us at the outset is that it is a sense that extends “beyond things spoken of only in relation to motion” and nowhere in Book Theta does he explicitly identify the useful sense as such. This has allowed for very different interpretations of the useful sense in the literature, the primary ones being that it is (1) ‘possibility’, (2) the potential to receive a form, (3) being-potentially-x understood modally as encompassing all specific senses of dunamis , and (4) capacity for substantial change. The present paper argues that there are significant problems with all of these suggestions and defends an identification of the useful sense of dunamis with the sense that Aristotle explicitly opposes to the not-useful sense at the start of Theta 8: phusis (‘nature’). This goes hand-in-hand with an identification of the useful sense of energeia with ‘activity’ as distinguished from motion/change at the end of Theta 6. What makes these senses of dunamis and energeia the useful ones for Aristotle’s present aim is that they are required to explain fully the priority of energeia to dunamis in substance defended in Theta 8, they support the identification in Theta 9 of energeia with the good, and they explain the unity of the only substances that Aristotle recognizes as being genuinely substances: natural living substances.

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Authors & Contributors
Peramatzis, Michail
Falcon, Andrea
Alfonso-Goldfarb, Ana Maria
Anagnostopoulos, Andreas Harol
Bolton, Robert
Bowin, John
Journals
Apeiron: Journal for Ancient Philosophy and Science
Metascience: An International Review Journal for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Science
Ancient Philosophy
Bochumer Philosophisches Jahrbuch fur Antike und Mittelalter
Synthese
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
University of California, Berkeley
Carocci Editore
University of Toronto Press
Walker & Company
Concepts
Nature
Philosophy
Physics
Philosophy of science
Change (philosophy)
Methodology of science; scientific method
People
Aristotle
Plato
Proclus
Archimedes
Empedocles of Agrigentum
Moore, G. E.
Time Periods
Ancient
20th century, early
Places
Greece
Rome (Italy)
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