Off-campus access
Using PhilPapers from home?
Click here to configure this browser for off-campus access.
- Gregory Vlastos (1950). The Physical Theory of Anaxagoras. Philosophical Review 59 (1):31-57.
Similar books and articles
Schofield clarifies some of the more obscure concepts of Anaxagoras, a Presocratic Greek philosopher whose theories concerned matter and change.
No categories
In this article, both Anaxagoras' theory of multiple worlds and the principles of his theory of matter are examined. It is argued that the five principles, which are set out explicitly in the extant fragments, (No Becoming, Indefinite Types, Universal Mixture, Predominance, and Infinite Divisibility) form a consistent set. Further, it is argued that the principle of Homoeomereity, which Anaxagoras attributes to Anaxagoras, is consistent with Anaxagoras' other principles and is likely to be a genuine principle of Anaxagoras' physics.
In this article, it is argued that, although there is significant debate over the nature of Anaxagoras' response to Parmenides, it is likely that Anaxagoras advances his physical theory in opposition to Parmenides' Numerical Monism. It is unlikely that Anaxagoras aims to develop a theory that harmonizes with the Predicational Monism that is sometimes ascribed to Parmenides. In addition, it is argued that, although some modern scholars suggest that Anaxagoras posits nous as a planning cause, no compelling argument has yet been advanced against Plato's interpretation, according to which Anaxagoras is not a proponent of teleological explanation.
Discussion of Gregory Vlastos, The physical theory of anaxagoras
|
|
There are no threads in this forum |
Nothing in this forum yet.

