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1 - The Comparative Study of Animal Development: William Harvey's Aristotelianism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 August 2009

James G. Lennox
Affiliation:
Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh
Justin E. H. Smith
Affiliation:
Concordia University, Montréal
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Summary

Aristotle is my general, Fabricius my guide.

Wm. Harvey, Preface to Exercitationes de generatione animalium

INTRODUCTION

Aristotle saw the study of nature as one of three kinds of theoretical investigation, that is, investigation aimed at knowledge for its own sake (the other two being first philosophy and mathematics; cf. Aristotle Metaphysics E 1 1026a7–22). The most central ontological distinction among the objects of “natural” study is that between eternal natural objects and those that come to be and pass away. Indeed, Aristotle begins his justly famous encomium for the study of animals with just that division:

Among the beings constituted by nature, some are ungenerated and imperishable throughout all eternity, while others partake of generation and perishing. Yet it has turned out that our studies of the former, though they are valuable and divine, are fewer (for as regards both those things on the basis of which one could examine them and those things about them which we long to know, the perceptual phenomena are altogether few). We are, however, much better provided in relation to knowledge about the perishable plants and animals, because we live among them. For anyone wishing to labor sufficiently can grasp many things about each kind. (644b22–31)

For Aristotle, the fact that animals and plants are generated and perish raises a number of special questions about how they are to be investigated, and most of the first chapter of De partibus animalium I, Aristotle's philosophical prolegomenon to the study of animals, is devoted to raising and answering those questions.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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