Ontological underpinnings of Aristotle's Philosophy of Science
Reconsidering Logical Principles: First Principles and Parameters of Rationality
Plato's Hippias Minor: translation, study and critical commentary
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Author(s): |
Wellington Damasceno de Almeida
Total Authors: 1
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Document type: | Master's Dissertation |
Press: | Campinas, SP. |
Institution: | Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP). Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas |
Defense date: | 2010-03-29 |
Examining board members: |
Lucas Angioni;
Fernando Eduardo de Barros Rey Puente;
Raphael Zillig
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Advisor: | Lucas Angioni |
Abstract | |
In the following pages, the reader will find a detailed study of what Aristotle considered the most difficult aporia formulated in Metaphysics III (Beta), which is answered in chapter 2 of Book X (Iota): the Eleventh Aporia. In such aporia, Aristotle rivals: (i) the conception assumed by the ancient Physiologoi, which takes the One to be an underlying nature whose being is not exhausted by being One, and (ii) the Platonic-Pythagorean view, which prefers to conceive the One in itself, according to its own determinations and apart from any connection with some reality outside it (AU) |