L’éternité du mouvement chez Ibn Bâjja (Avempace) : de la définition générique à la défintion numérique. Le commentaire aux chapitres 1 et 2 du livre VIII de la Physique, 2016
By: Farah Cherif Zahar
Title L’éternité du mouvement chez Ibn Bâjja (Avempace) : de la définition générique à la défintion numérique. Le commentaire aux chapitres 1 et 2 du livre VIII de la Physique
Type Article
Language French
Date 2016
Journal Les Études Philosophiques
Volume 117
Issue 2
Pages 161–216
Categories Aristotle, Physics, al-Fārābī, Ibn Bāǧǧa, Influence
Author(s) Farah Cherif Zahar
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
This article examines Ibn Bāǧǧa’s (Avempace) interpretation of the first two chapters of the eighth book of Aristotle’s Physics and what he has in mind when he describes Aristotle’s proof as a demonstration of the eternity of motion “in genus.” His approach in the second appendix to book eight differs from the one he develops in the main commentary. In the former text, Ibn Bāǧǧa works on the distinction between essential and accidental successions, which leads him to realize that the accidental and thus possible successions— horizontal approach—are not sufficient to guarantee the eternity of movement and then to adopt a vertical approach that goes back to the numerical identity of the circular continuous motion. We show to what extent Ibn Bāǧǧa’s interpretation is indebted to Al-Fārābī’s lost treatise On Changing Beings and also aim to highlight the role of this reading in the evolution of Averroes’ interpretation.

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Pensée, dénomination extrinsèque et changement chez Averroès. Une lecture d’Aristote, Physique, VII, 3, 2015
By: Jean-Baptiste Brenet
Title Pensée, dénomination extrinsèque et changement chez Averroès. Une lecture d’Aristote, Physique, VII, 3
Type Article
Language French
Date 2015
Journal Archives d’Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge
Volume 82
Pages 23–43
Categories Aristotle, Physics, Psychology
Author(s) Jean-Baptiste Brenet
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Scholastic Explanations of Why Local Motion Generates Heat, 2003
By: Griet Galle
Title Scholastic Explanations of Why Local Motion Generates Heat
Type Article
Language English
Date 2003
Journal Early Science and Medicine
Volume 8
Issue 4
Pages 336-370
Categories Aristotle, Physics, Tradition and Reception
Author(s) Griet Galle
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Walter Burley's "Physics" Commentaries and the Mathematics of Alteration, 2001
By: Edith Dudley Sylla
Title Walter Burley's "Physics" Commentaries and the Mathematics of Alteration
Type Article
Language English
Date 2001
Journal Early Science and Medicine,
Volume 6
Issue 3
Pages 149-184
Categories Commentary, Aristotle, Tradition and Reception, Physics
Author(s) Edith Dudley Sylla
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Ibn Rushd's Theory of Minima Naturalia, 2001
By: Ruth Glasner
Title Ibn Rushd's Theory of Minima Naturalia
Type Article
Language English
Date 2001
Journal Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
Volume 11
Pages 9–26
Categories Physics, Aristotle
Author(s) Ruth Glasner
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
The essence of the theory of minima naturalia is the contention that a physical body is not infinitely divisible qua that specific body. A drop of water cannot be divided again and again and still maintain its “wateriness”. There are several statements in Aristotle's Physics which suggest such an interpretation, and the theory of minima naturalia is commonly considered to have originated in the thirteenth century as an interpretation of these statements. The present paper is a preliminary presentation of the role of Ibn Rushd in the evolution of the theory, hitherto neglected. His theory developed not only as an elaboration on the "suitable" statements of Aristotle, but mainly as an attempt to solve the difficulties raised by Aristotle's thesis (developed in PhysicsVI and VII) that body and motion are continuous, infinitely divisible entities and are associated qua such. According to Ibn Rushd's interpretation, body and motion are associated not qua being continuous but qua having indivisible minimal parts. It seems that Epicurus' and Ibn Rushd's theories of minima developed as responses to Physics VI and offer modifications of classical atomism and of classical Aristotelianism (respectively), which to a certain extent reduce the gap between these two systems.

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Ibn Rushd's Theory of Minima Naturalia, 2001
By: Ruth Glasner
Title Ibn Rushd's Theory of Minima Naturalia
Type Article
Language English
Date 2001
Journal Arabic Sciences and Philosophy
Volume 11
Pages 9–26
Categories Physics, Aristotle
Author(s) Ruth Glasner
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
The essence of the theory of minima naturalia is the contention that a physical body is not infinitely divisible qua that specific body. A drop of water cannot be divided again and again and still maintain its “wateriness”. There are several statements in Aristotle's Physics which suggest such an interpretation, and the theory of minima naturalia is commonly considered to have originated in the thirteenth century as an interpretation of these statements. The present paper is a preliminary presentation of the role of Ibn Rushd in the evolution of the theory, hitherto neglected. His theory developed not only as an elaboration on the "suitable" statements of Aristotle, but mainly as an attempt to solve the difficulties raised by Aristotle's thesis (developed in PhysicsVI and VII) that body and motion are continuous, infinitely divisible entities and are associated qua such. According to Ibn Rushd's interpretation, body and motion are associated not qua being continuous but qua having indivisible minimal parts. It seems that Epicurus' and Ibn Rushd's theories of minima developed as responses to Physics VI and offer modifications of classical atomism and of classical Aristotelianism (respectively), which to a certain extent reduce the gap between these two systems.

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L’éternité du mouvement chez Ibn Bâjja (Avempace) : de la définition générique à la défintion numérique. Le commentaire aux chapitres 1 et 2 du livre VIII de la Physique, 2016
By: Farah Cherif Zahar
Title L’éternité du mouvement chez Ibn Bâjja (Avempace) : de la définition générique à la défintion numérique. Le commentaire aux chapitres 1 et 2 du livre VIII de la Physique
Type Article
Language French
Date 2016
Journal Les Études Philosophiques
Volume 117
Issue 2
Pages 161–216
Categories Aristotle, Physics, al-Fārābī, Ibn Bāǧǧa, Influence
Author(s) Farah Cherif Zahar
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
This article examines Ibn Bāǧǧa’s (Avempace) interpretation of the first two chapters of the eighth book of Aristotle’s Physics and what he has in mind when he describes Aristotle’s proof as a demonstration of the eternity of motion “in genus.” His approach in the second appendix to book eight differs from the one he develops in the main commentary. In the former text, Ibn Bāǧǧa works on the distinction between essential and accidental successions, which leads him to realize that the accidental and thus possible successions— horizontal approach—are not sufficient to guarantee the eternity of movement and then to adopt a vertical approach that goes back to the numerical identity of the circular continuous motion. We show to what extent Ibn Bāǧǧa’s interpretation is indebted to Al-Fārābī’s lost treatise On Changing Beings and also aim to highlight the role of this reading in the evolution of Averroes’ interpretation.

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Pensée, dénomination extrinsèque et changement chez Averroès. Une lecture d’Aristote, Physique, VII, 3, 2015
By: Jean-Baptiste Brenet
Title Pensée, dénomination extrinsèque et changement chez Averroès. Une lecture d’Aristote, Physique, VII, 3
Type Article
Language French
Date 2015
Journal Archives d’Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge
Volume 82
Pages 23–43
Categories Aristotle, Physics, Psychology
Author(s) Jean-Baptiste Brenet
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Scholastic Explanations of Why Local Motion Generates Heat, 2003
By: Griet Galle
Title Scholastic Explanations of Why Local Motion Generates Heat
Type Article
Language English
Date 2003
Journal Early Science and Medicine
Volume 8
Issue 4
Pages 336-370
Categories Aristotle, Physics, Tradition and Reception
Author(s) Griet Galle
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Walter Burley's "Physics" Commentaries and the Mathematics of Alteration, 2001
By: Edith Dudley Sylla
Title Walter Burley's "Physics" Commentaries and the Mathematics of Alteration
Type Article
Language English
Date 2001
Journal Early Science and Medicine,
Volume 6
Issue 3
Pages 149-184
Categories Commentary, Aristotle, Tradition and Reception, Physics
Author(s) Edith Dudley Sylla
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