SOME REMARKS ON ARISTOTLE’S CONCEPT OF FORM AND ITS POSSIBLE INTERPRETATION IN THE LIGHT OF CONTEMPORARY THOUGHT Cover Image
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SOME REMARKS ON ARISTOTLE’S CONCEPT OF FORM AND ITS POSSIBLE INTERPRETATION IN THE LIGHT OF CONTEMPORARY THOUGHT
SOME REMARKS ON ARISTOTLE’S CONCEPT OF FORM AND ITS POSSIBLE INTERPRETATION IN THE LIGHT OF CONTEMPORARY THOUGHT

Author(s): Danilo Facca
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: Instytut Filozofii i Socjologii Polskiej Akademii Nauk
Keywords: Aristotle; hylemorphism; form; matter; mind-body problem.

Summary/Abstract: The reflection on form (eidos, morphe) is situated at the core of Aristotle’s philosophy. Not only it was the bone of contention with Plato and other academic philosophers, who maintained the separateness and immutability of forms, but mature Aristotle’s theory of form provided him with an adequate theoretical equipment for all fields of scientific inquiry, so the concept of form proved to be all-pervasive (transcendental). This issue is examined in the paper. The article also deals with some issues characteristic of the contemporary (postmodern) debate, such as the question of sense and intellectual cognition, the problem of identity, the mind-body problem. Finally, the parallel topic of matter is addressed by showing that Aristotle’s conception still proves incisive in contrasting several theories, lending itself—more or less implicitly—to the Neoplatonic conception.

  • Issue Year: 2015
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 37-50
  • Page Count: 14