aristotle
12 candidate claims · branch V · biophysics
- so what do we do with that well there's always risk through that we obviously don't want to have a naive metaphysics like we now know like Aristotle has by just conceptualizing— The Net (41): Neoplatonism, Vertical Causation, Xenobots, Nature/Notion, Fre(Q) Theory, &
- went on to carefully criticize engage with and assess the prior attempts at answering the question of being by Kant dayart and Aristotle but it was never written part of that is because heiger— Martin Heidegger Explained, Part 1: Being and Time (1927)
- Philosophical maxim known as the principle of sufficient reason so here you have Aristotle Spinoza followed up with his version of the principle of sufficient reason and then live nets on the right german philosopher who also invented calculus They all put forward this idea that we can understand how the world works at a deep level by providing Explanations for everything we see in it nothing happens randomly nothing just happens There's always a purpose a cause a reason why?— The Big Picture: From the Big Bang to the Meaning of Life - with Sean Carroll
- brookless porphyry Plutarch Clement of Alexandria Aristotle and other early authorities monad 1. is so called because it remains always in the same condition that is— THE SECRET TEACHINGS OF ALL AGES (Pt. 2 of 4) - Manly P. Hall - full esoteric occult audio
- content the role of the arbitrary and unjustifiable in art has never been sufficiently acknowledged ever since the Enterprise of criticism began with Aristotle's Poetics critics have been— "On Style" full video essay by Susan Sontag | female voice full audio
- variety must inevitably result. Thus it is further evident that life can never become monotonous or exhaust the possibilities of variety of the philosophy of Aristotle. The same author— The Secret Teachings of All Ages (Pt1) - Manly P. Hall | Masonic, Hermetic & Qabbalistic
- which means he can create policies. And he must do so. For Aristotle, he's a political animal. For Aquinas, he's a social animal and must be ruled. For Kant, he's autonomous— Roger Berkowitz: Exploring the Human Condition
- macroscopic world that we are familiar with in our everyday lives that Aristotle knew about Speaks a completely different language There is dissipation there's cause and effect There's a natural state for things to move in there are reasons why? Things happen rather than not happen and much of this is due to this first— The Big Picture: From the Big Bang to the Meaning of Life - with Sean Carroll
- moons or the sorry there were mountains on the moon as he did using his telescope he encouraged a philosopher to look through it he said I don't need to look for it because Aristotle has— The Matter With Things: The Case for Shifting Our Attention Dr Iain McGilchrist, Geneva, S
- there's lots of things moving in the universe. Every one of them requires a mover. There's for every effect in the universe, Aristotle says, there is a cause. He develops an elaborate— Sean Carrol "The Big Picture - On the Origins of Life, Meaning and the Universe Itself"
- There seems to be reasons why things happen. If the book moves, it's because I moved it. And for Aristotle and for many other people, this metaphysical claim that things that happen do so because something causes them to happen,— The Big Picture | Sean Carroll | Talks at Google
- Because it implies that there's a different way that the world naturally is. If you're Aristotle, the natural way for things to be is to kind of sit there in their happy place, and you need to do something to get them moving.— The Big Picture | Sean Carroll | Talks at Google