Description |
1 online resource |
Series |
Oxford Aristotle studies |
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Oxford Aristotle studies.
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Contents |
Cover; Aristotle on Knowledge and Learning: The Posterior Analytics; Copyright; Dedication; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations of Titles of Aristotle's Works; Introduction; General Introduction; 1. Meno's Paradox; 2. The Order of Inquiry; 3. Nous; What nous is; How nous is acquired; 1: Meno's Paradox and the Prior Knowledge Requirement; 1. Meno's Three Questions; 2. Socrates's Dilemma; 3. Meno's and Socrates's Prior Cognition Requirements; 4. Aristotle on Learning: the Prior Knowledge Requirement; 5. Aristotle on Knowledge; 6. Prior Knowledge of What? |
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7. Prior Cognition and Prior Knowledge in Plato and Aristotle8. Simultaneous Learning in APo 1.1; 9. Meno's Paradox in APo 1.1; Conclusion; PART I: Learning by Demonstration; 2: Learning by Demonstration; 1. The Prevailing View; 2. Textual Evidence; 3. Scientific Knowledge and Demonstration: APo 1.2; 4. What is Learning by Demonstration?; First type; Objection; Second type; Conclusion; 3: Belonging 'In Itself' and Aristotle's Theory of Demonstration; 1. Belonging 'In Itself ' (Kath' Hauto): APo 1.4; 2. In Itself2: Demonstrable Attributes; 3. In Itself Accidents: Demonstrable Attributes |
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4. Two Models of Demonstration4: Scientific Knowledge and Demonstration; 1. Non-Demonstrative Scientific Knowledge (Nous); 2. Scientific Knowledge and Explanation; 3. Epistēmē, Nous, and Logos; 4. The Objects of Scientific Knowledge; 5. Scientific vs. Non-Scientific Knowledge; 6. The Requirements for Principles of Demonstration; 7. The Prior Knowledge Requirement for Learning by Demonstration; 8. Learning by Demonstration, Revisited; Conclusion; PART II: Learning by Definition; 5: Learning by Definition: Introduction; 1. Some Preliminaries; 2. Learning by Demonstration and by Definition |
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6: Inquiry in APo 2.11. The Four Questions of Inquiry; 2. Inquiry and Scientific Knowledge; 3. Knowledge in APo 2; 4. From Non-Scientific to Scientific Knowledge; 5. The Objects of Inquiry; 6. The Stages of Inquiry; 7. Meno's Paradox; 7: Inquiry in APo 2.2; 1. Searching for the Middle Term; 2. Attribute Questions; 3. The Causal and Definitional Constraints; 4. Meno's Paradox; 5. The Causal Constraint for Attributes; 6. The Definitional Constraint: Introducing Causally Complex Essences; 7. Attributes and Subjects; 8. The A Term; 9. A Missing A Term?; 10. Definition and Explanation |
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11. Subject-Focused Inquiry12. Essence and Middle Term; Conclusion; 8: The Socratic Picture of the Order of Inquiry; 1. The Intuitionist Picture; 2. The Explanationist Picture; 3. The Socratic Picture; 4. Three Methodological Passages; 5. Better Known By Nature and To Us: Explanation, Conviction, and Nous; 6. An Objection; 9: Cause, Essence, and Definition; 1. Causes that are the Same vs. Causes that are Different; 2. Cause and Essence; 3. The Two Types of Cause in APo 2.9; 4. How Essences are Discovered; 5. APo 2.10: Definition; 6. Nominal Accounts in APo 2.10; Conclusion |
Summary |
David Bronstein sheds new light on Aristotle's 'Posterior Analytics' - one of the most important, and difficult, works in the history of Western philosophy. He argues that it is coherently structured around two themes of enduring philosophical interest - knowledge and learning - and goes on to highlight Plato's influence on Aristotle's text |
Notes |
This edition previously issued in print: 2016 |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Online resource; title from home page (viewed on April 26, 2016) |
Subject |
Aristotle. Posteriora analytica
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Knowledge, Theory of.
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epistemology.
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PHILOSOPHY -- Epistemology.
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Knowledge, Theory of
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9780191792427 |
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019179242X |
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9780191037917 |
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0191037915 |
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9780198724902 |
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019872490X |
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