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Aristotle - Methodology |  | Aristotle - Methodology: Encyclopedia II - Aristotle - Methodology |  | Aristotle defines philosophy in terms of essence, saying that philosophy is "the science of the universal essence of that which is actual". Plato had defined it as the "science of the idea", meaning by idea what we should call the unconditional basis of phenomena. Both pupil and master regard philosophy as concerned with the universal; Aristotle, however, finds the universal in particular things, and called it the essence of things, while Plato finds that the universal exists apart from particular things, and is related to them as their prot ...
See also:Aristotle, Aristotle - Biography, Aristotle - Early life and studies at the Academy, Aristotle - Aristotle as philosopher and tutor, Aristotle - Founder and master of the Lyceum, Aristotle - Methodology, Aristotle - Aristotle's epistemology, Aristotle - Logic, Aristotle - Science, Aristotle - Aristotle's metaphysics, Aristotle - Aristotle's four causes, Aristotle - The difference between natural objects and artifacts, Aristotle - Modes of causation, Aristotle - Chance, Aristotle - The Five Elements, Aristotle - Aristotle's ethics, Aristotle - Nicomachean ethics, Aristotle - Aristotle's critics, Aristotle - The Loss of his works, Aristotle - Bibliography, Aristotle - Major works, Aristotle - Specific editions, Aristotle - Named for Aristotle |  | | Aristotle, Aristotle - Aristotle as philosopher and tutor, Aristotle - Aristotle's critics, Aristotle - Aristotle's epistemology, Aristotle - Aristotle's ethics, Aristotle - Aristotle's four causes, Aristotle - Aristotle's metaphysics, Aristotle - Bibliography, Aristotle - Biography, Aristotle - Chance, Aristotle - Early life and studies at the Academy, Aristotle - Founder and master of the Lyceum, Aristotle - Logic, Aristotle - Major works, Aristotle - Methodology, Aristotle - Modes of causation, Aristotle - Named for Aristotle, Aristotle - Nicomachean ethics, Aristotle - Science, Aristotle - Specific editions, Aristotle - The Five Elements, Aristotle - The Loss of his works, Aristotle - The difference between natural objects and artifacts, Aristotelian view of God, Aristotelian theory of gravity, Philosophy, Plato, Logic, Aristotle's theory of potentialiy and actuality |  | |
|  |  | Aristotle: Encyclopedia II - Aristotle - Methodology
Aristotle - Methodology
For more details on this topic, see Aristotle's theory of universals.
Aristotle defines philosophy in terms of essence, saying that philosophy is "the science of the universal essence of that which is actual". Plato had defined it as the "science of the idea", meaning by idea what we should call the unconditional basis of phenomena. Both pupil and master regard philosophy as concerned with the universal; Aristotle, however, finds the universal in particular things, and called it the essence of things, while Plato finds that the universal exists apart from particular things, and is related to them as their prototype or exemplar. For Aristotle, therefore, philosophic method implies the ascent from the study of particular phenomena to the knowledge of essences, while for Plato philosophic method means the descent from a knowledge of universal ideas to a contemplation of particular imitations of those ideas. In a certain sense, Aristotle's method is both inductive and deductive, while Plato's is essentially deductive.
In Aristotle's terminology, the term natural philosophy corresponds to the phenomena of the natural world, which include: motion, light, and the laws of physics. Many centuries later these subjects would become the basis of modern science, as studied through the scientific method. In modern times the term philosophy has come to be more narrowly understood as metaphysics, distinct from empirical study of the natural world via the physical sciences. In constrast, in Aristotle's time and use philosophy was taken to encompass all facets of intellectual inquiry.
In the larger sense of the word, he makes philosophy coextensive with reasoning, which he also called "science". Note, however, that his use of the term science carries a different meaning than that which is covered by the scientific method. "All science (dianoia) is either practical, poetical or theoretical." By practical science he understands ethics and politics; by poetical, he means the study of poetry and the other fine arts; while by theoretical philosophy he means physics, mathematics, and metaphysics.
The last, philosophy in the stricter sense, he defines as "the knowledge of immaterial being," and calls it "first philosophy", "the theologic science" or of "being in the highest degree of abstraction." If logic, or, as Aristotle calls it, Analytic, be regarded as a study preliminary to philosophy, we have as divisions of Aristotelian philosophy (1) Logic; (2) Theoretical Philosophy, including Metaphysics, Physics, Mathematics, (3) Practical Philosophy; and (4) Poetical Philosophy.
Other related archives12th century, 13th century, 15th century, 1951, 1968, 2004, 322 BC, 335 BC, 340s BC, 344 BC, 347 BC, 384 BC, 60 BC, 86 BC, Academy, Alexander the Great, Amyntas III of Macedon, Analytic, Anaxagoras, Ancient Greek, Ancient philosophy, Andronicus of Rhodes, Andros, Apellicon of Teos, Apollo Lyceios, Aristoteles crater, Aristotelian ethics, Aristotelian logic, Aristotelian theory of gravity, Aristotelian view of God, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Aristotle's theory of potentialiy and actuality, Aristotle's theory of universals, Asia Minor, Athens, Aulus Gellius, Avicenna, Bekker numbers, Bertrand Russell, Callisthenes, Categories, Chalcidice, Chalcis, Christ, Christian, Cicero, Cockney rhyming slang, Constitution of the Athenians, Corpus Aristotelicum, De Anima, Dialogues, Diogenes, Efficient Cause, Endoxa, Epicureans, Euboea, Eudemian Ethics, Farabi, Final Cause, Formal Cause, Galileo, Golden Age of Islam, Gorgias, Great Ethics, Greek, Greek philosophy, Gregory Nazianzen, Harpalus, Harvard University, Hephaestion, Hermias, History of Animals, J. Arthur Rank, John Philoponus, Jonathan Barnes, Justin Martyr, Kantian, Lamian war, Lesbos, Loeb Classical Library, Logic, Lyceum, Macedonian, March 7, Material Cause, Mathematics, Mechanical Problems, Melissus, Metaphysics, Meteorology, Middle Ages, Moon, Mytilene, Nicolaus of Damascus, Nicomachean Ethics, Nicomachus, Non-Aristotelian logic, On Dreams, On Generation and Corruption, On Interpretation, On Longevity and Shortness of Life, On Memory and Reminiscence, On Prophesying by Dreams, On Sense and the Sensible, On Sleep and Sleeplessness, On Sophistical Refutations, On the Cosmos, On the Gait of Animals, On the Generation of Animals, On the Heavens, On the Parts of Animals, On the Soul, Organon, Oxford Classical Texts, Oxford University, Parallel Lives, Peripatetic, Philip II of Macedon, Philosophy, Physics, Plato, Platonism, Platonists, Pliny, Plutarch, Poetics, Politics, Posterior Analytics, Presocratic, Princeton University, Prior Analytics, Rhetoric, Rome, Scholastic, Socrates, Stageira, Strabo, Straton, Sulla, The history of animals, Theophrastus, Topics, Truth, Western, Western philosophy, Xenocrates, Xenophanes, abstract, aesthetics, anatomy, ancient Greek, ancient Greek philosophers, artifact, astrological, astronomy, behaving, biology, causes, colony, conclusion, deduction, deductive, deficiency, dialectic, dialectics, didactic, dogma, economics, education, embryology, empirical, empiricism, empiricists, encyclopedia, epistemology, essence, ethics, excess, exemplar, experiment, fifth century, genera, geography, geology, gods, goodness, government, gravity, gymnasium, happiness, hemlock, heretics, idea, impiety, impulse, inductive, innate, laws of physics, light, literature, logic, magical, mass, materialism, medicine, metaphysics, meteorology, middle ages, modal logic, motion, orphan, particular, patristic, phenomena, philosopher, philosophy, physics, poetry, politics, premises, prototype, psychology, reason, reasoning, reductio ad absurdum, rhetoric, scientific method, skeptical, soul, syllogisms, syntax, systematic, telos, theology, theoretical, tides, treatise, truth, universal, virtue, virtues, worldview, zoology
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Methodology", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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