Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2020
In Aristotle’s Physics we find for the first time motion and speed implicitly measured in terms of time and distance covered, as the discussion of book VI, chapter 2 shows. Aristotle’s explicit account of measurement, however, which he gives in Metaphysics Iota and with which this chapter starts, understands measure not only as homogeneous with the measurand, but also as one-dimensional only. Accordingly, the explicit measure of motion is simply time in the Physics, as we see from examining Aristotle’s understanding of time as the measure and the number of motion. For a full account of motion and speed and a complete response to Zeno’s challenge, however, a complex measure is needed, one that takes account of both time taken and distance covered. The chapter shows that this is exactly what Aristotle implicitly develops in his Physics, when he compares motions of different speed and responds to Zeno’s paradoxes of motion. But it is not what he can accommodate in his theory of measurement.
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