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Aristotle on Life and Death

Autor R.A.H. King
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 iun 2001
Aristotle's Parva Naturalia culminates in definitions of the stages of the life cycle, from the generation of a new living thing up to death. Aristotle thinks of living things as food burners: they nourish themselves, and so, in some cases, possess the capacity for higher living functions such as perceiving. Their burning must be balanced, if it is to continue - and one way they do this is through breathing. Nonetheless, all such burning naturally develops and declines, thus describing the life span of the being concerned. This book provides a detailed reading of the end of the Parva Naturalia ("On the Length and Shortness of Life", "On Youth, Old Age, Life and Death", including "On Breathing"), and shows how the investigation into life begun in the De Anima is completed in the Parva Naturalia, culminating in definitions of the stages of the life cycle, from generation of a new living thing up to death, using the activity of nutrition.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780715629826
ISBN-10: 0715629824
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 153 x 234 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.35 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bristol Classical Press
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Abbreviations and conventionsAcknowledgements1. Life-cycles1.1 Mortals and Others1.2 Interpreting Aristotle on Life and Death1.3 Aristotle and the explanation of life-cycles2. Nature2.1 Nature and Nutrition2.2 Nature as Form2.3 Heuristic and ontological teleology3. Soul3.1 The project of de Anima and its completion in Parva Naturalia3.2 The first actuality of a natural body with organs3.3 Growth and nutrition3.4 Natural form and natural matter: what perishes and what does not3.5 The seat of the soul4. Body4.1 Balanced capacities in Aristotelian mixtures4.2 Living things and their surroundings4.3 The explanation of life-span: the hot and the wet4.4 Fire, connate heat and perishing4.5 Balancing heat4.6 Explaining breathing4.7 The heart and pneumatosis5. Defining the life-cycleNotesSelect BibliographyIndex locorumGeneral index

Descriere

Aristotle's "Parva Naturalia" culminates in definitions of the stages of the life cycle, from the generation of a new living thing up to death. This book provides a detailed reading of the end of the "Parva Naturalia" and shows how it completes the investigation into life begun in the "De Anima".