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20 - The nature of change

from III - Natural philosophy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2014

Johannes M. M. H. Thijssen
Affiliation:
Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen
Robert Pasnau
Affiliation:
University of Colorado Boulder
Christina van Dyke
Affiliation:
Calvin College, Michigan
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Summary

In the Rules for the Direction of the Mind (Rule 12), René Descartes pokes fun at the Aristotelian definition of motion. “Who doesn’t know what motion is?,” he asks rhetorically; he then contends that motion has no need of an explanation, because each and every one of us knows what it is. In The World ch. 7, started around the same time, Descartes even claims that he finds the scholastic definition of motion so obscure that he is forced to leave it in “their language” – that is, motus est actus entis in potentia prout in potentia est (“motion is the actuality of a thing in potentiality insofar as it is in potentiality”). For Aristotle, however, and the medievals in his wake, motion was not merely an event familiar from everyday experience, but a phenomenon whose nature needed closer investigation. The central place that motion occupied in medieval thought can be understood only in the context of Aristotelian natural philosophy, particularly as it was set out in Book III of Aristotle’s Physics and developed by medieval thinkers.

This chapter will restrict itself to the medieval discussion of the nature of motion – that is, it will restrict itself to the question ‘What is motion?’ or, more generally, ‘What is change?’ Other significant problem areas which medieval thinkers addressed include the dynamic and kinematic aspects of motion – that is, motion’s relations to distance and time, and the causes of motion. In medieval terminology, these aspects concerned the study of motion “with respect to effect” (penes effectum) and “with respect to cause” (penes causam).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

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