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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter October 7, 2015

Two Aristotelian Puzzles about Planets and their Neoplatonic Reception

  • Dirk Baltzly EMAIL logo
From the journal Apeiron

Abstract

The longevity of Aristotelian natural science consists not so much in the fact that Aristotle’s solutions to puzzles were accepted by generations of philosophers, but by the fact that the presuppositions that made these puzzles look puzzling were. In what follows I consider some Neoplatonic responses to two puzzles that Aristotle poses in De Caelo Book 2, Chapter 12. Both Proclus and Simplicius rejected Aristotle’s solutions to the puzzles he posed. In one case, but not in the other, they also reassessed the relative importance of the presuppositions that created the puzzle.

Published Online: 2015-10-7
Published in Print: 2015-10-1

© 2015 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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