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AN00150430-00000075-0019  
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Title
Title 『自然学』A巻における生成の問題 : 質料概念の形成をめぐって  
Kana 『シゼンガク』 Aカン ニ オケル セイセイ ノ モンダイ : シツリョウ ガイネン ノ ケイセイ オ メグッテ  
Romanization "Shizengaku" Akan ni okeru seisei no mondai : shitsuryo gainen no keisei o megutte  
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Title The problem of change in Aristotle's physics, A : on the formation of the concept of matter  
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Creator
Name 千葉, 恵  
Kana チバ, ケイ  
Romanization Chiba, Kei  
Affiliation 慶應義塾大学大学院文学研究科哲学専攻博士課程  
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Place
東京  
Publisher
Name 三田哲學會  
Kana ミタ テツガクカイ  
Romanization Mita tetsugakukai  
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Issued (from:yyyy) 1982  
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Source Title
Name 哲學  
Name (Translated)  
Volume  
Issue 75  
Year 1982  
Month 12  
Start page 19  
End page 45  
ISSN
05632099  
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Abstract
In the first book of Physics, which is said to belong to his early Academia period, Aristotle investigates the principles of change in general - matter, privation and form. The most important of his discoveries in that book is, it seems, the concept of matter analysed in terms of the underlying thing (substratum) of change; the thing underlying is the terminus a quo and the thing constituted is the terminus ad quem of change. The relation of both termini consists in the fact that matter is the proximate cause of the thing constituted, such as bronze becoming a statue and wood becoming a bed, so that an analogy is found in the relation between the matter qua terminus a quo and the thing constituted qua terminus ad quem as between bronze and statue, wood and bed, and so on. It follows that Aristotle devised at first the concept of matter in relation to the thing constituted, not in relation to the formal cause as seen in later writings, for matter is consistently. in Physics, A the proximate cause of the thing constituted, and not in such a way that prime matter is claimed to be the ultimate cause of all things as many commentators interpret the text.
 
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日本語  
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Sep 21, 2010 09:00:00  
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Sep 21, 2010 09:00:00  
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/ Public / Faculty of Letters / Philosophy / 75 (198200)
 
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