![Descartes Spinoza Leibniz - The Concept of Substance in Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics 笛卡爾斯賓諾莎萊布尼茲 - 十七世紀(jì)形而上學(xué)的物質(zhì)概念_第1頁(yè)](http://file4.renrendoc.com/view11/M03/1D/24/wKhkGWWp_wWAKM1CAAF5angEpMw303.jpg)
![Descartes Spinoza Leibniz - The Concept of Substance in Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics 笛卡爾斯賓諾莎萊布尼茲 - 十七世紀(jì)形而上學(xué)的物質(zhì)概念_第2頁(yè)](http://file4.renrendoc.com/view11/M03/1D/24/wKhkGWWp_wWAKM1CAAF5angEpMw3032.jpg)
![Descartes Spinoza Leibniz - The Concept of Substance in Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics 笛卡爾斯賓諾莎萊布尼茲 - 十七世紀(jì)形而上學(xué)的物質(zhì)概念_第3頁(yè)](http://file4.renrendoc.com/view11/M03/1D/24/wKhkGWWp_wWAKM1CAAF5angEpMw3033.jpg)
![Descartes Spinoza Leibniz - The Concept of Substance in Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics 笛卡爾斯賓諾莎萊布尼茲 - 十七世紀(jì)形而上學(xué)的物質(zhì)概念_第4頁(yè)](http://file4.renrendoc.com/view11/M03/1D/24/wKhkGWWp_wWAKM1CAAF5angEpMw3034.jpg)
![Descartes Spinoza Leibniz - The Concept of Substance in Seventeenth-Century Metaphysics 笛卡爾斯賓諾莎萊布尼茲 - 十七世紀(jì)形而上學(xué)的物質(zhì)概念_第5頁(yè)](http://file4.renrendoc.com/view11/M03/1D/24/wKhkGWWp_wWAKM1CAAF5angEpMw3035.jpg)
版權(quán)說(shuō)明:本文檔由用戶提供并上傳,收益歸屬內(nèi)容提供方,若內(nèi)容存在侵權(quán),請(qǐng)進(jìn)行舉報(bào)或認(rèn)領(lǐng)
文檔簡(jiǎn)介
DESCARTES,SPINOZA,LEIBNIZ
Theconceptofsubstanceinseventeenth-centurymetaphysics
R.S.Woolhouse
LondonandNewYork
-iii-
ToShirley
Firstpublished1993
byRoutledge
11NewFetterLane,LondonEC4P4EE
SimultaneouslypublishedintheUSAandCanada
byRoutledge
29West35thStreet,NewYork,NY10001
?1993R.S.Woolhouse
Typesetin10on12pointBaskervilleby
Computerset,Harmondsworth,Middlesex
PrintedinGreatBritainbyClaysLtd.,St.Ivesplc
Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthisbookmaybereprinted
orreproducedorutilizedinanyformorbyanyelectronic,
mechanical,orothermeans,nowknownorhereafter
invented,includingphotocopyingandrecording,orinany
informationstorageorretrievalsystem,without
permissioninwritingfromthepublishers.
BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData
Woolhouse,R.S.
Descartes,Spinoza,Leibniz:TheConceptofSubstancein
Seventeenth-CenturyMetaphysics
I.Title
111
LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData
Woolhouse,R.S.
Descartes,Spinoza,Leibniz:theconceptofsubstanceinseventeenth-
centurymetaphysics/RogerWoolhouse.
p.cm.
Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex.
1.Substance(Philosophy)2.Descartes,René,1596-1650.3.Spinoza,
Benedictusde,1632-1677.4.Leibniz,GottfriedWilhelm,Freiherr
von,1646-1716.
I.Title.
BD331.W861993
111′.-dc20
92-33547
ISBN0-415-09021-00-415-09022-9(pbk)
-iv-
Contents
Acknowledgements
vi
Editionsandabbreviations
vii
1Introduction
1
2DescartesandSubstance
14
3SpinozaandSubstance
28
4LeibnizandSubstance
54
5Descartes,Spinoza,andLeibniz,andExtendedSubstance
75
Introduction
75
Descartesandextendedsubstance
78
Spinozaandextendedsubstance
88
Leibnizandextendedsubstance
94
6Descartes,Spinoza,andLeibniz,andtheMechanicsofExtendedSubstance
102
Descartes
102
Spinoza
115
Leibniz
116
7Causation,OccasionalismandForce
134
8Descartes,Spinoza,andLeibniz,andThinkingSubstance
150
9ExtendedSubstanceandThinkingSubstancerelated:'thenatureoftheunionbetweenbodyandmind'
164
10UncreatedandCreatedSubstance:GodandtheWorld
190
Bibliography
199
Index
209
-v-
EditionsandAbbreviations
DESCARTES
ParticularWorks
B
'ConversationwithBurman',asinJohnCottingham(trans.)(1976)Descartes'ConversationwithBurman,Oxford:ClarendonPress.
Med
MeditationsonFirstPhilosophy,asinCSM2.
PP
PrinciplesofPhilosophy,asinCSM1andMM.(Unlessindicatedotherwise,allquotationsfromPParefromCSM1.)
PS
ThePassionsoftheSoul,asinCSM1.
Rep
RepliestoObjectionstotheMeditations,asinCSM2.
Editions
AT:
CharlesAdamandPaulTannery(eds)(1897-1913)OeuvresdeDescartes,13vols.,Paris:Cerf(reprinted(1957-8)Paris:Vrin).
CSM
JohnCottingham,RobertStoothoff,andDugaldMurdoch(trans.)(1985)ThePhilosophicalWritingsofDescartes,2vols,Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress.
K
AnthonyKenny(trans.anded.)(1970)Descartes:PhilosophicalLetters,Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress.
MM
ValentineRodgerMillerandReeseP.Miller(trans.andeds.)(1983)RenéDescartes:PrinciplesofPhilosophy,Dordrecht:Reidel.
-vii-
SPINOZA
Particularworks
DPP
Descartes''PrinciplesofPhilosophy',asinC.
E
Ethics,asinC.(Referencestothisareoftheform'2P13D',i.e.DemonstrationofProposition13ofpart2.OtherabbreviationsareS,scholium;A,axiom;Pref,preface;Def,definition;C,corollary;E,explanation.
Ep
Correspondence,asinC(Eps1-29)andW.
TGM
ShortTreatiseonGodandMan,asinC.
TPT
Theologico-PoliticalTreatise,asinEl.
Editions
C
E.M.Curley(trans.anded.)(1985)TheCollectedWorksofSpinoza,vol.1,Princeton,NJ:PrincetonUniversityPress.
El
R.H.M.Elwes(trans.)(1883)TheChiefWorksofSpinoza,2vols,London:Bell(reprinted(1951)NewYork:Dover).
W
A.Wolf(trans.anded.)(1928)TheCorrespondenceofSpinoza,London:Allen&Unwin.
LEIBNIZ
Particularworks
DM
DiscourseonMetaphysics,asinL.
LA
CorrespondencewithArnauld,asinH.T.Mason(trans.anded.)(1967)TheLeibniz-ArnauldCorrespondence,Manchester/NewYork:ManchesterUniversityPress/Barnes&Noble.
NE
NewEssaysonHumanUnderstanding,asinRB.
T
Theodicy,asinH.
Editions
AG
RogerAriewandDanielGarber(trans.)(1989)G.W.Leibniz:PhilosophicalEssays,IndianapolisandCambridge,MA:Hackett.
-viii-
E
J.E.Erdmann(ed.)(1840)G.G.LeibnitiiOperaPhilosophiaeQuaeExtant,2vols,Berlin,G.Eichler.
G
C.I.Gerhardt(ed.)(1875-90)PhilosophischenSchriften,7vols,Berlin:Weidmann.
GM
C.I.Gerhardt(ed.)(1849-55)MathematischeSchriften,7vols,BerlinandHalle:H.W.Schmidt.
Gr
G.Grua(ed.)(1948)G.W.Leibniz:Textesinédits,2vols,Paris:PressesUniversitairesdeFrance.
H
E.M.Huggard(trans.)(1951)Leibniz'Theodicy:EssaysontheGoodnessofGod,theFreedomofMan,andtheOriginofEvil,London:Routledge&KeganPaul.
L
LeroyL.Loemker(trans.anded.)(1969)Leibniz:PhilosophicalPapersandLetters,2ndedn,Dordrecht-Holland:Reidel.
La
AlfredGideonLangley(trans.)(1949)Leibniz:NewEssaysConcerningHumanUnderstanding,TogetherwithanAppendixConsistingofSomeofhisShorterPieces,LaSalle,IL:OpenCourt.
LP
G.H.R.Parkinson(trans.anded.)(1966)Leibniz:LogicalPapers,Oxford:ClarendonPress.
Lt
RobertLatta(trans.anded.)(1898)Leibniz:TheMonadologyandotherPhilosophicalWritings,London:OxfordUniversityPress.
PM
G.H.R.ParkinsonandMaryMorris(trans.andeds)(1973)Leibniz:PhilosophicalWritings,London:Dent.
RB
PeterRemnantandJonathanBennett(trans.andeds)(1981)G.W.Leibniz:NewEssaysonHumanUnderstanding,Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress.
Wi
PhilipP.Wiener(trans.anded.)(1951)Leibniz:Selections,NewYork:Scribner's.
-ix-
1
Introduction
Modernphilosophyisusuallytakentodatefromtheseventeenthcentury,andRenéDescartes(1596-1650)isoftennamedasitsfather.ThisneednotmeanthatDescarteswasthefirstnoteworthyandidentifiably'modern'philosopher.ThomasHobbes(1588-1679)hasclaimstheretoo.WhatitdoesmeanisthatDescartesmorethanotherswasresponsibleforthestyle,theshape,andthecontentofmuchsubsequentphilosophy-atfirstontheContinent,andtheninEngland.1Hisdistinctionbetweenextendedandthinkingsubstance,hisproofsofhisownexistenceandofthatofagoodGod,hisaccountofthematerialworldasoneofextendedmatterinmotion,allstirredupcontroversyanddiscussionwhosewavesrockedtheremainderoftheseventeenthcenturyandtroubledmostoftheeighteenth,andwhoseripplesarestilldiscernibletoday.Contemporaryreports,frombothsidesoftheEnglishChannel,testifytooneaspectofhisimportance:hisfreshnessandnewness.AccordingtoChristianHuygens,theDutchmathematician,astronomer,andphysicist,
WhatgreatlypleasedinthebeginningwhenthisphilosophybegantoappearisthatoneunderstoodwhatM.desCarteswassaying,whiletheotherphilosophersgaveuswordsthatmadenothingcomprehensible,suchasqualities,substantialforms,intentionalspecies,etc.Herejectedmoreuniversallythananyotherbeforehimthisirrelevantparaphernalia.Butwhatespeciallyrecommendedhisphilosophy,isthathedidnotstopshortatgivingadisgustfortheold,buthedaredtosubstitutecausesthatcanbeunderstoodofallthereisinnature.
(trans.Dugas1958:312)
-1-
Itwastothesame'justly-admiredgentleman'thatJohnLockesaidheowed'thegreatobligationofmyfirstdeliverancefromtheunintelligiblewayoftalkingofthephilosophyinuseintheschoolsinhistime'(1823:4.48).
InthesetestimonialstoDescartes'sinfluenceontheseventeenthcenturyhis'new'philosophyiscontrastedwithan'official',Scholastic,or'school'philosophy-aphilosophyfilledwithideaswhichhadbeguntoseemunintelligible.ThisolderphilosophybelongstoabroadlyAristoteliantradition,anditistheexplicitrejectionofthistradition,andoftheauthorityofAristotle,thatmarksforDescartes,andformanyofhiscontemporariesandsuccessors,theirownsenseoftheir'modernity'.
TwopeopleforwhomDescartes'sphilosophysetanew,post-AristotelianscenewereBenedictSpinoza(1632-77)andGottfriedLeibniz(1646-1716).LeibnizsaysthatSpinoza'onlycultivatedcertainseedsinthephilosophyofDescartes'(G2.563)andthathisphilosophyis'anexaggeratedCartesianism'(T359).AsforDescarteshimself,heissomeone'whosegeniusiselevatedalmostaboveallpraise'.He'certainlybeganthetrueandrightway',andsaid'excellentandoriginalthings'.YetLeibniz'spraisehaditslimits:thoughgoingsofarastobe'theentrancehalltothetruth',Descartes'sphilosophy'missedthemark'anddidnotquitemakeit.2Leibniz'sdisagreementswithitaredeep.SpinozatoohadhiscriticismsofDescartes,3andDescartes'sownfollowerswerekeen,ontheologicalgrounds,todispelanyideathatSpinozamightbeoneofthem.4Noneofthis,however,preventedthedevelopmentofatraditionwhichpicturesbothSpinozaandLeibnizas'Cartesians'.5
Initsdiscussionofthemetaphysicalviewsofthesethreeimportantseventeenth-centuryphilosophersthisbooksupposesthatthereareintrinsicrelationsbetweenthem.ButitformulatesnogeneralconclusionsaboutwhetherSpinozaandLeibnizareorarenot'Cartesians'.Itsimplyproceedsontheassumption-anassumptiontobejudgedbyitsfruits-thattheveryshapeorconceptualcontent,andnotthemereverbaldress,6ofmanyofSpinoza'sideashaveCartesianonesasabackground;andthat(whetherdirectly,orindirectlyviaSpinoza)thesameistrueofLeibniz.
Spinozawas18whenDescartesdied,andtheyneithermetnorcorresponded.In1663,however,hepublishedanexpositionofDescartes'sinfluentialPrinciplesofPhilosophy(1644).Thiswas
-2-
designedastuitionmaterialforapupiltowhom,Spinozasays,'Ididnotwanttoteachmyownopinionsopenly'(Ep13/C207),andSpinozaagreedwithfriendsthatheshould'warn...ReadersthatIdidnotacknowledgealltheopinions...asmyown,sinceIhadwrittenmanythings...whichweretheveryoppositeofwhatIheld'(Ep13/C207).Neverthelessitsveryexistencebetokensadeepunderstandingof,andconcernwith,Cartesianism.ItisnosurprisethatSpinoza'sownphilosophyinhisEthics(1677)showskeenawarenessofDescartes's.
FourteenyearsyoungerthanSpinoza,Leibnizwasonly4whenDescartesdied.Theyhadquasi-personalcontactwhenLeibnizmetDescartes'sfriendandliteraryexecutor,ClaudeClerselier,whoshowedhimsomeofDescartes'sunpublishedpapers.7ButlikeanyotherEuropeanphilosopherofthetime,LeibnizreadandstudiedDescartes,andinthe1690shetoohadplanstopublishanassessmentofDescartes'sPrinciplesofPhilosophy8ThisassessmentwouldhavebroughttogetherallthewaysinwhichDescartes,soneartothetruth,hadyet'missedthemark'(L432),andallthecriticismsLeibnizhaddevelopedovertheyears,andoutofwhichhisownpositiveviewshademerged.HisrelationshiptoDescartesiswell-summedupinaletterof1680:
IesteemMrDescartesalmostasmuchasonecanesteemanyman,andthoughthereareamonghisopinionssomewhichseemfalsetome...thisdoesnotkeepmefromsayingthatweowenearlyasmuchtoGalileoandtohiminphilosophicalmattersastothewholeofantiquity.
(L273)
AsforSpinozaandLeibniz,theybothcorrespondedandmet.In1671,inanexchangeoflettersonoptics,9SpinozaofferedtosendLeibnizhisrecentlypublishedTractatusTheologico-Politicus.Later,in1675,LeibnizwassuggestedtoSpinozaassomeone'veryexpertinmetaphysicalstudies'(Ep70/W339),andhenceassomeonetowhomthemanuscriptoftheEthics,thencirculatingamongSpinoza'sfriends,mightusefullybeshown.Spinoza,whoseTractatusTheologico-Politicus(1670)hadalreadybecomeinfamous,considered'itimprudenttoentrustmywritingstohimsosoon'(Ep72/W431),andaskedthatmorebelearntaboutLeibniz'scharacter.Intheevent,LeibnizmetwithSpinozainHollandthenextyearand,hereported,'spokewithhimseveraltimesandforverylong'(L167);accordingtonoteshemadeatthe
-3-
time,atleastsomeofthediscussionconcernedtheEthics.Spinozadiedthenextyear,andwhentheEthicswaseventuallypublishedLeibnizmadefurtherdetailednotes.10Manyofthesearecritical,asaremostofthecommentsonSpinozawhicharescatteredthroughhiswritings.LikeothersatthetimeLeibnizthoughtthatSpinoza'sideasweredangeroustoreligion;hisviewofthenatureofGodandcreationinparticular.HeoftenexplicitlycontrastshisowndoctrineswithSpinoza's.AletterhewroteonthepublicationofSpinoza'sEthicsgivesanassessmentoftherelationshipbetweentheirideas:
Ihavefoundthereanumberofexcellentthoughtswhichagreewithmyown,assomeofmyfriendsknowwhohavealsolearnedfromSpinoza.ButtherearealsoparadoxeswhichIdonotfindtrueorevenplausible.As,forexample,thatthereisonlyonesubstance,namelyGod;thatcreatures[createdthings]aremodesoraccidentsofGod....Iconsiderthisbookdangerousforthosewhowishtotakethepainstomasterit.
(L195)
Thisbookdiscussesthemetaphysicsofthesethreephilosophers.Specifically,itfocusesonwhatDescartes,Spinoza,andLeibnizsayabout'substance'.'[F]ailuretounderstandthenature'ofthisis,saysLeibniz,'thecauseof[Descartes's]errors'(L433)andofSpinoza's'paradoxes'(L195).Butwhatis'metaphysics'?Whatis'substance'?
Theterm'metaphysics'originatedasthetitleofsomeofAristotle'sbooks.ThoughAristotlehimselfcalledthesubjectmatterofthesebooks'firstphilosophy',itappearsthatinearlyeditionsofhisworkstheywerearrangedinorderafterhisbookPhysics;sothey,andhencetheirsubjectmatter,cametobeknownasMetaphysics('after','above',or'beyond'thePhysics).Onepartof'firstphilosophy'asconceivedbyAristotlewasthestudyof'beingasbeing'(Met1003a20),astudywhichconcernsthequestionwhatbeingis.Thisquestion,saysAristotle,'wasraisedofoldandisraisednowandalways,andisalwaysthesubjectofdoubt';andheaddsthatthequestion'Whatisbeing?''isjustthequestion,whatissubstance?'(Met1028b3).ThequestionsarethesamebecausetheGreekfortheEnglishword'substance'(Latin:substantia)isousia,whichcomesfromtheGreekverbfor'tobe'.
-4-
Onenaturalwaytounderstandthequestionwhatbeingorsubstanceis,andonewhichfitsmuchofwhatAristotlesays,isasarequestforanaccountofwhatisreal.'Whatdoesrealitycomprise?'(Stead:66),arecentwriteronAristotleputsit.So,asAristotleremarks,'substance'or'being'is'thoughttobelongmostobviouslytobodies'(Met1028b9);thesearewhataremostnaturallypickedoutasconstitutiveofreality.'[W]esaythatnotonlyanimalsandplants...aresubstances,butalsonaturalbodiessuchasfireandwaterandearth.'Butwhetherthisinitial,'mostobvious',thoughtisright,whetherthesereallyaresubstances,is,saysAristotle,somethingwhich'mustbeconsidered'(Met1028b8-16).
ToaconsiderableextentAristotlethinksthethoughtiscorrect,thoughonthewaytothisconclusionhegivesalengthyaccountofjustwhatitisaboutanimals,plants,andnaturalbodiesthatconstitutestheirbeingorsubstantiality.Moreover,ashepointsout,somepeoplehavethoughtotherwise.VariousearlierGreekphilosophershadthoughtthatrealityconsistsultimatelyinsomethingotherthanthesethings,somethingofwhichthesethingsaremerelythesurfacephenomena.Somehadheldthatthereisonebasicsubstanceorultimatelyrealbeing:accordingtoThalesthisis'water';accordingtoParmenidesitisaneverlasting,motionless,andhomogeneous'One'.Somehadheldthatthereismorethanonebasicsubstanceorultimatelyrealbeing:accordingtoEmpedoclestheworldasweknowitisproducedfromfour'roots'or'elements'-Fire,Air,Earth,Water-workedonbythetwoprinciplesofLoveandStrife;accordingtotheatomistssuchasDemocritusitisaresultofthechancemovementsandcollisionsofdifferentlyshapedindivisibleatoms.
TheancientGreekinterestinmetaphysics,anditscorequestionaboutsubstanceorbeing,issharedbythephilosophersoftheseventeenthcentury.Infactitisoneoftheircentralconcerns.AccordingtoLeibniz,'theconsiderationofsubstanceisofthegreatestimportanceandfruitfulnessforphilosophy'(NE151);andthesewordscouldserveasamottonotonlyforhisworkbutalsoforthatofDescartesandSpinoza.Healsosays,inanarticle'Onthecorrectionofmetaphysicsandtheconceptofsubstance',thatunlikeDescartes'saccount,whichledtoerror,his'issofruitfulthattherefollowfromitprimarytruths,evenaboutGodandmindsandthenatureofbodies-truthsheretoforeknowninpartthoughbarelydemonstrated,andunknowninpart,butof
-5-
thegreatestutilityforthefutureintheothersciences'(L433).Leibniz'sestimationoftheimportanceoftheconceptofsubstanceiscorrect.Whathesaysfollowsfromhisaccountistheheartofnearlythewholeofhisphilosophy;andSpinoza'sgreatwork,theEthics,isessentiallynothinglessthanalengthyelaborationofthedefinitionofsubstancewithwhichitallbutopens.AsforDescartes,thoughhiswritingsarenotsoclearlystructuredasametaphysicsofsubstance,hecertainlydevelopsoneatlength,andmanyofhisphilosophicalviewsconnectwithit;withoutit,SpinozaandLeibnizwouldnothavewrittenastheydid.
Besidessharinganinterestinthequestionwhatsubstanceorbeingis,thephilosophersoftheseventeenthcenturyalsoretaintheoriginalAristotelianideaofmetaphysicsas'first'orfoundationalphilosophy.ThisisvividlypresentedintheprefacetoDescartes'sPrinciplesofPhilosophy,wherethewholeofphilosophyisportrayedasatree:'Therootsaremetaphysics,thetrunkisphysics,andthebranchesemergingfromthetrunkarealltheothersciences'(CSM1.186).Theideaofmetaphysics-'thisregalscience'(L432)-asthefoundationorsourceofotherbranchesofknowledgeistakenupbyLeibniztoo.Sciencessuchasphysicsdependonit:'thelawsofmechanics...flow...frommetaphysicalprinciples'(trans.MacDonaldRoss:146);they'cannotbeadvancedwithoutmetaphysicalprinciples',principleswithoutwhich'generalphysicsisentirelyincomplete'(trans.MacDonaldRoss:154).
Giventheactualoriginoftheterm'metaphysics',itisjustacoincidencethatamainconcernof'firstphilosophy',asunderstoodanddevelopednotonlybyAristotlebutalsointheseventeenthcentury,canbethoughtofasmetaphysicalorbeyondphysicsinthesenseofbeingmorebasic,abstractandgeneralthanphysics.Physics,wemightsay,tellsusaboutthedetailsoftheworld'sphenomena;metaphysicsaboutwhatunderliesthosephenomena,whatthereality,being,orsubstantialityoftheworldbasicallyorultimatelyconsistsin.Thus,tounderstandthedetailedworkingsoftheworld,allthephenomenaandappearanceswhichitpresentstous,istounderstandthemintermsofthepropertiesandactivitiesofthesubstanceswhichconstitutetheworld.But,inthecontextofthephilosophyoftheseventeenthcentury,itisaparticularlynicecoincidence.Thatcenturysawtheemergenceanddevelopmentofwhatwenowknowasmodernscience.ItsawthepublicationofJohannesKepler'sNewAstronomy
-6-
orCelestialPhysics(1609),WilliamHarvey'sAnatomicalEssayontheMotionoftheHeartandBlood(1628),GalileoGalilei'sDialoguesontheTwoChiefSystemsoftheWorld(1632),andIsaacNewton'sTheMathematicalPrinciplesofNaturalPhilosophy(1687).Itsawthedevelopmentofthetelescopeandthemicroscope.ItsawthefoundationofscientificsocietiessuchastheRoyalSocietyofLondonfortheAdvancementofExperimentalKnowledge(1660s);anditsawtheworkofoccupantsofthe'HallofScientificFame',suchasRobertBoyle,RobertHooke,andChristianHuygens.LaterchaptersofthisbookwillshowhowthemetaphysicsofDescartes,Spinoza,andLeibniznotonlyprovidegeneralbackgroundconceptionsoftheworldasdescribedindetailbythemoreparticularsciences,butalsocontributequitedirectlytothetheoreticalfoundationsofseventeenth-centuryphysicsandmechanics.
EventhoughtherejectionofAristotlemarksforthephilosophersoftheseventeenthcenturytheirownsenseoftheir'modernity',theyhardlyfreethemselvesfromtheScholastictraditioncompletely.LeavingasidethefactthatLeibnizevenwishedtoreinstatesomeelementsofAristotelianism,itisclearthattheso-called'newphilosophers'inheritedfromAristotlethegeneralconceptionofakindofinvestigationcalled'firstphilosophy'or'metaphysics',and,alongwiththatconception,theideathatoneofitscentralconcernsistogiveanaccountofwhatisultimatelyreal.Moreover,theydidnotjusttakeupAristotle'squestion,'Whatissubstanceorbeing?'Theywereinfluencedbyhisanswerstoo.ManyofthefeaturesandmuchofthedetailofAristotle'sdoctrinesonsubstancearepresent,ofteninasomewhatprogrammatic,sloganisedformintheseventeenth-centurydiscussions.Soweneedtohavesomeimpressionofthe'Aristotelian'ideastheywerefamiliarwithbeforeweturntoDescartes's,Spinoza's,andLeibniz'smetaphysicsofsubstance.
'Someimpression'isallwecanhopeforhere.Foronething,Aristotle'sowndiscussionsinhisCategoriesandMetaphysicsarelengthy,detailed,andwrittenatdifferenttimes.Thereismuchscholarlydisputeaboutthem,andquitepossiblythereisnosingle,unified,coherent,andconsistentinterpretationtobegiven;11theyare,afterall,lecturenotesratherthanfinishedproductions.Foranotherthing,Aristotledidnotspeakdirectlytotheseventeenthcentury.Hisideascamedownthroughthemediumofcenturies
-7-
ofdiscussion,commentary,interpretation,amendment.MedievalScholasticphilosophers,suchasOckhamand,inparticular,Aquinas,arecentralfiguresinthisprocess.
OneinfluentialthemewhichcameoutofAristotle(asatMetaphysics1017bl4andCategories2all)isthatofsubstanceasthatwhichisthesubjectofpredicatesandnotitselfthepredicateofanythingelse.Avariationofthisistheidea-'themostdistinctivemarkofsubstance',Aristotlecallsit(Cat4al0)-thatsubstancesarewhatundergoorunderliechange.'[O]neandtheself-samesubstance,whileretainingitsidentity,isyetcapableofadmittingcontraryqualities...atonetimewarm,atanothercold'(Cat4a19-21).
Accordingly,particularthings,suchasthemanSocratesorthehorseBucephalus,becomeprimeexamplesofsubstances.'Substancesaremostproperlysocalled,becausetheyunderlieandarethesubjectsofeverythingelse'(Cat2b39).SocratesandBucephalushavepropertiesandqualities(theyhavethingspredicatedofthem),andarenotthemselvesthepropertiesorqualitiesofanythingelse.Moreover,theirpropertiesandqualitiescanchangeovertime.Qualitiescouldnotexistwithoutthem;qualitiesgettheirrealitybybeingqualitiesofotherthingswhicharesubstantialandrealinthemselves.Theactivityofwalking,orthestateofhealth,isnot'self-subsistentorcapableofbeingseparatedfromsubstance'(Met1028a23).Ifsubstances'didnotexist,itwouldbeimpossibleforanythingelsetoexist'(Cat2b6).
Butthoughitthusleadstotheideaof'substance'as'individualsubstance'(totheideaofthemanSocrates,orthehorseBucephalus,asexemplificationsofbasicrealities),thethemeofsubstanceasthesubjectofpredicatesandaswhatunderlieschangedoesnotalwaysstopthere.ApassageintheMetaphysicsglossestheideathatsubstanceisthesubjectofpredicationbytalkingofsubstanceas'theultimatesubstratum,whichisnolongerpredicatedofanythingelse'(1017b23).Thismightbereadasmeaningnotonlythatqualities,suchasahorse'scolour,arenotsubstances,butalsothattheindividualhorseitselfisnotultimatelyasubstanceeither.Thehorseitselfwouldthenbetheresultofpredicatingthecharacteristicsofequinityofsomepredicatelessultimatesubstratum.ThiscertainlyistheideathathasbeentakenfromlaterpassagesintheMetaphysicswheresubstanceis'theultimatesubstratum[which]isofitselfneitheraparticularthingnorofaparticularquantitynorotherwisepositivelycharac-
-8-
terised'(1029a24).Accordingtothisconceptionofit,'substance'wouldbeexemplifiedbywhatiscalledmatter-ofwhichAristotlesays,'ifthisisnotsubstance,itbafflesustosaywhatelseis.Whenallelseisstrippedoffevidentlynothingbutmatterremains'(Met1029al0-ll).
Elsewhere(inbooksZandHoftheMetaphysics)'matter'figures,notassubstanceitself,conceivedofasultimatesubstratum,butasoneelementinatwo-foldanalysisofsubstanceconceivedofasindividualsubstantiality.Aparticularthing,suchasahouse,isacomposite,ofmatter,suchasbricksandtimber,disposedorarrangedinoraccordingtoacertainfarm;abowlorstatueisacompositeofmattersuchasbronze,formedinacertainway.Sofar,ofcourse,bronzeisstillmatterofacertainkind;itismatteronlyrelativetotheformofthebowl.Onemightgofurther,therefore,andthinkofthebronzemerelyas'secondarymatter',matterwhichisitselfacompositeofmorebasicmatter,andtheformofbronze.PossiblyAristotlehimselfdidnotintendthis,butitiscertainlysuggestedbyhistalkof'strippingalloffuntilmerematterremains,anditisencouragedbyAquinas'laterdoctrineofultimate,basicmateriaprima.Thisso-called'hylomorphic'analysisofindividualsubstancesintomatter(Greek:hyle)andform(morphe)wascentraltoAquinas'metaphysicsinthemiddleages,andahighlysignificantitemoftheintellectualinheritanceoftheseventeenthcentury.Weshouldlookintoitfurther.
'Individualsubstances'aresometimesspokenofas'primary'or'firstsubstances',asopposedto'secondsubstances',thekindsorspeciesofwhichtheyareindividuals-theindividualsubstanceBucephalusisanindividualofasecondary
溫馨提示
- 1. 本站所有資源如無(wú)特殊說(shuō)明,都需要本地電腦安裝OFFICE2007和PDF閱讀器。圖紙軟件為CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.壓縮文件請(qǐng)下載最新的WinRAR軟件解壓。
- 2. 本站的文檔不包含任何第三方提供的附件圖紙等,如果需要附件,請(qǐng)聯(lián)系上傳者。文件的所有權(quán)益歸上傳用戶所有。
- 3. 本站RAR壓縮包中若帶圖紙,網(wǎng)頁(yè)內(nèi)容里面會(huì)有圖紙預(yù)覽,若沒(méi)有圖紙預(yù)覽就沒(méi)有圖紙。
- 4. 未經(jīng)權(quán)益所有人同意不得將文件中的內(nèi)容挪作商業(yè)或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文庫(kù)網(wǎng)僅提供信息存儲(chǔ)空間,僅對(duì)用戶上傳內(nèi)容的表現(xiàn)方式做保護(hù)處理,對(duì)用戶上傳分享的文檔內(nèi)容本身不做任何修改或編輯,并不能對(duì)任何下載內(nèi)容負(fù)責(zé)。
- 6. 下載文件中如有侵權(quán)或不適當(dāng)內(nèi)容,請(qǐng)與我們聯(lián)系,我們立即糾正。
- 7. 本站不保證下載資源的準(zhǔn)確性、安全性和完整性, 同時(shí)也不承擔(dān)用戶因使用這些下載資源對(duì)自己和他人造成任何形式的傷害或損失。
最新文檔
- 智能家電產(chǎn)品研發(fā)及應(yīng)用合作協(xié)議
- 關(guān)于合同事務(wù)往來(lái)的文書(shū)范例
- 智慧校園建設(shè)及運(yùn)營(yíng)合作協(xié)議
- 職工愛(ài)崗敬業(yè)責(zé)任協(xié)議書(shū)
- 股權(quán)投資合作協(xié)議書(shū)
- 建房承包施工合同
- 特殊教育機(jī)構(gòu)教育服務(wù)安全免責(zé)協(xié)議書(shū)
- 田徑體育場(chǎng)館租賃合同書(shū)
- 股份制組織架構(gòu)優(yōu)化方案
- 全國(guó)滇人版初中信息技術(shù)七年級(jí)上冊(cè)第三單元第14課《數(shù)據(jù)的計(jì)算-用函數(shù)計(jì)算數(shù)據(jù)》教學(xué)設(shè)計(jì)
- 第九單元跨學(xué)科實(shí)踐活動(dòng)8海洋資源的綜合利用與制鹽教學(xué)設(shè)計(jì)-2024-2025學(xué)年九年級(jí)化學(xué)人教版(2024)下冊(cè)
- 河南省鄭州市外國(guó)語(yǔ)學(xué)校2025屆高考?jí)狠S卷英語(yǔ)試卷含解析
- 2024年教育創(chuàng)新:五年級(jí)下冊(cè)美術(shù)教案新解讀
- 儲(chǔ)能電池模組PACK和系統(tǒng)集成項(xiàng)目可行性研究報(bào)告
- DB12T990-2020建筑類(lèi)建設(shè)工程規(guī)劃許可證設(shè)計(jì)方案規(guī)范
- 2023-2024學(xué)年九年級(jí)三調(diào)語(yǔ)文試卷(含答案)
- 交通運(yùn)輸概論課件:綜合交通運(yùn)輸體系
- 醫(yī)學(xué)教材 矮身材兒童診治指南
- 醫(yī)學(xué)教程 常見(jiàn)急腹癥的超聲診斷課件
- ppr管材合同模板
- 航空器維修工程師考試考核試卷
評(píng)論
0/150
提交評(píng)論