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Book Cover
E-book
Author Duncombe, Matthew, author.

Title Ancient relativity : Plato, Aristotle, Stoics, and Sceptics / Matthew Duncombe
Edition First edition
Published Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2020
©2020

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Description 1 online resource (xii, 293 pages)
Contents Constitutive relativity in Plato -- Relativity and separation in the theory of Forms -- Relativity and partition in Republic -- Relativity in Categories 7, Topics, and Sophistical Refutations -- Aristotle on the distinction between substances and relatives -- Relativity in Aristotle's Metaphysics 5.15 -- Relativity and independence in Aristotle's On Ideas -- Stoic relativity -- Relativity in Stoic physics, metaphysics, and ethics -- Relativity against dogmatism in Sextus Empiricus
Summary "Relativity is the phenomenon that things relate to things: parents to their offspring; doubles to halves; larger things to smaller things. This book is about how ancient philosophers, particularly Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and Sextus Empiricus, understood this phenomenon and how their theories of relativity affected, and were affected by, their broader philosophical outlooks. Many scholars have thought that ancient thinkers were either fundamentally confused about the phenomenon of relativity, or held a view that is a trivial variation on a modern view. This book argues that neither is the case. In fact, ancient philosophers shared a close-knit family of views, referred to as 'constitutive relativity': a relative is not simply linked by a relation, but is constituted by it. The book shows that this view is present in Plato, and is exploited by him in some key arguments concerning the Forms and the partition of the soul. Aristotle adopts the constitutive view in his discussions of relativity in Categories 7 and the Topics, and retains the constitutive view in his later discussion in Metaphysics 5.15. The Relatives Argument of Aristotle's lost work On Ideas also involves constitutive relativity. The book moves on to examine a complex report of Stoic relativity and the role relativity played in Stoic philosophy. Finally, the book discusses Sextus Empiricus' way of thinking about relativity, which does not appeal to the nature of relatives, but rather to how we conceive of things as correlative"--Publisher's website
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 257-265) and indexes
Notes Online resource; title from web page (Oxford Scholarship Online, viewed on August 5, 2020)
Subject Plato.
Aristotle
SUBJECT Aristotle fast
Plato fast
Subject Stoics -- History
Relativity.
Philosophy, Ancient.
Stoics
Philosophy, Ancient
Relativity
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780192585097
0192585096
9780191881343
0191881341