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Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 3.1-7

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 3.1-7
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 191
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472501616

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The subject of Aristotle's On the Heavens, Books 3-4, is the four elements of earth, air, fire and water, which exist below the heavens. Book 3, in chapters 1 to 7, frequently criticizes the Presocratic philosophers. Because of this, Simplicius' commentary is one of our main sources of quotations of the Presocratics. Ian Mueller's translation of this commentary gains added importance by enabling us to see the context which guided Simplicius' selection of Presocratic texts to quote. Simplicius also criticizes the lost commentary of the leading Aristotelian commentator, Alexander, and thereby gives us important information about that work. The English translation in this volume is accompanied by a detailed introduction, extensive commentary notes and a bibliography.


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.3-4

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.3-4
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472501705

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This is the first English translation of Simplicius' responses to Philoponus' Against Aristotle on the Eternity of the World. The commentary is published in two volumes: Ian Mueller's previous book in the series, Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.2-3, and this book on 1.3-4. Philoponus, the Christian, had argued that Aristotle's arguments do not succeed. For all they show to the contrary, Christianity may be right that the heavens were brought into existence by the only divine being and one moment in time, and will cease to exist at some future moment. Simplicius upholds the pagan view that the heavens are eternal and divine, and argues that their eternity is shown by their astronomical movements coupled with certain principles of Aristotle. The English translation in this volume is accompanied by a detailed introduction, extensive commentary notes and a bibliography.


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.1-4

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.1-4
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2014-04-10
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 178093906X

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In chapter 1 of On the Heavens Aristotle defines body, and then notoriously ruptures dynamics by introducing a fifth element, beyond Plato's four, to explain the rotation of the heavens, which, like nearly all Greeks, Aristotle took to be real, not apparent. Even a member of his school, Xenarchus, we are told, rejected his fifth element. The Neoplatonist Simplicius seeks to harmonise Plato and Aristotle. Plato, he says, thought that the heavens were composed of all four elements but with the purest kind of fire, namely light, predominating. That Plato would not mind this being called a fifth element is shown by his associating with the heavens the fifth of the five convex regular solids recognised by geometry. Simplicius follows Aristotle's view that one of the lower elements, fire, also rotates, as shown by the behaviour of comets. But such motion, though natural for the fifth elements, is super-natural for fire. Simplicius reveals that the Aristotelian Alexander of Aphrodisias recognised the need to supplement Aristotle and account for the annual approach and retreat of planets by means of Ptolemy's epicycles or eccentrics. Aristotle's philosopher-god is turned by Simplicius, following his teacher Ammonius, into a creator-god, like Plato's. But the creation is beginningless, as shown by the argument that, if you try to imagine a time when it began, you cannot answer the question, 'Why not sooner?' In explaining the creation, Simplicius follows the Neoplatonist expansion of Aristotle's four 'causes' to six. The final result gives us a cosmology very considerably removed from Aristotle's.


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.5-9

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.5-9
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 147250111X

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Aristotle argues in On the Heavens 1.5-7 that there can be no infinitely large body, and in 1.8-9 that there cannot be more than one physical world. As a corollary in 1.9, he infers that there is no place, vacuum or time beyond the outermost stars. As one argument in favour of a single world, he argues that his four elements: earth, air, fire and water, have only one natural destination apiece. Moreover they accelerate as they approach it and acceleration cannot be unlimited. However, the Neoplatonist Simplicius, who wrote the commentary in the sixth century AD (here translated into English), tells us that this whole world view was to be rejected by Strato, the third head of Aristotle's school. At the same time, he tells us the different theories of acceleration in Greek philosophy.


On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.1-4

On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.1-4
Author: Simplicius (of Cilicia.)
Publisher: Bristol Classical Press
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2002
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN:

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Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.1-4

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.1-4
Author: Simplicius
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2014-04-10
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472557379

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This text is a translation of Simplicius' commentary on Aristotle's "On the Heaven 1.1-4".


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 3.7-4.6

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 3.7-4.6
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472501632

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Commenting on the end of Aristotle's On the Heavens Book 3, Simplicius examines Aristotle's criticisms of Plato's theory of elemental chemistry in the Timaeus. Plato makes the characteristics of the four elements depend on the shapes of component corpuscles and ultimately on the arrangement of the triangles which compose them. Simplicius preserves and criticizes the contributions made to the debate in lost works by two other major commentators, Alexander the Aristotelian, and Proclus the Platonist. In Book 4, Simplicius identifies fifteen objections by Aristotle to Plato's views on weight in the four elements. He finishes Book 4 by elaborating Aristotle's criticisms of Democritus' theory of weight in the atoms, including Democritus' suggestions about the influence of atomic shape on certain atomic motions. This volume includes an English translation of Simplicius' commentary, a detailed introduction, extensive commentary notes and a bibliography.


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.2-3

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 1.2-3
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472501667

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One of the arguments in Aristotle's On the Heavens propounds that the world neither came to be nor will perish. This volume contains the pagan Neoplatonist Simplicius of Cilicia's commentary on the first part of this this important work. The commentary is notable and unusual because Simplicius includes in his discussion lengthy representations of the Christian John Philoponus' criticisms of Aristotle along with his own, frequently sarcastic, responses. This is the first complete translation into a modern language of Simplicius' commentary, and is accompanied by a detailed introduction, extensive explanatory notes and a bibliography.


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 2.1-9

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Heavens 2.1-9
Author: Simplicius,
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472501136

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Aristotle believed that the outermost stars are carried round us on a transparent sphere. There are directions in the universe and a preferred direction of rotation. The sun moon and planets are carried on different revolving spheres. The spheres and celestial bodies are composed of an everlasting fifth element, which has none of the ordinary contrary properties like heat and cold which could destroy it, but only the facility for uniform rotation. But this creates problems as to how the heavenly bodies create light, and, in the case of the sun, heat. The value of Simplicius' commentary on On the Heavens 2,1-9 lies both in its preservation of the lost comments of Alexander and in Simplicius' controversy with him. The two of them discuss not only the problem mentioned, but also whether soul and nature move the spheres as two distinct forces or as one. Alexander appears to have simplified Aristotle's system of 55 spheres down to seven, and some hints may be gleaned as to whether, simplifying further, he thinks there are seven ultimate movers, or only one.


Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Soul 1.1-2.4

Simplicius: On Aristotle On the Soul 1.1-2.4
Author: J.O. Urmson
Publisher: A&C Black
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2014-04-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1472501837

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The commentary attributed to Simplicius on Aristotle's On the Soul appears in this series in three volumes, of which this is the first. The translation provides the first opportunity for a wider readership to assess the disputed question of authorship. Is the work by Simplicius, or by his colleague Priscian, or by another commentator? In the second volume, Priscian's Paraphrase of Theophrastus on Sense Perception, which covers the same subject, will also be translated for comparison. Whatever its authorship, the commentary is a major source for late Neoplatonist theories of thought and sense perception and provides considerable insight into this important area of Aristotle's thought. In this first volume, the Neoplatonist commentator covers the first half of Aristotle's On the Soul, comprising Aristotle's survey of his predecessors and his own rival account of the nature of the soul.