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  1. (1 other version)Do powers need powers to make them powerful? From pandispositionalism to Aristotle.Anna Marmodoro - 2010 - In The Metaphysics of Powers: Their Grounding and Their Manifestations. New York: Routledge. pp. 337 - 352.
    Do powers have powers? More urgently, do powers need further powers to do what powers do? Stathis Psillos says they do. He finds this a fatal flaw in the nature of pure powers: pure powers have a regressive nature. Their nature is incoherent to us, and they should not be admitted into the ontology. I argue that pure powers do not need further powers; rather, they do what they do because they are powers. I show that at the heart of (...)
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  • (1 other version)Cause and explanation in ancient Greek thought.R. J. Hankinson - 1998 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    R. J. Hankinson traces the history of ancient Greek thinking about causation and explanation, from its earliest beginnings through more than a thousand years to the middle of the first millennium of the Christian era. He examines ways in which the Ancient Greeks dealt with questions about how and why things happen as and when they do, about the basic constitution and structure of things, about function and purpose, laws of nature, chance, coincidence, and responsibility.
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  • The Origins of Aristotle’s Concept of Ένέργεια.Stephen Menn - 1994 - Ancient Philosophy 14 (1):73-114.
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  • The Metaphysics of Powers: Their Grounding and Their Manifestations.Anna Marmodoro (ed.) - 2010 - New York: Routledge.
    This volume is a collection of papers that advance our understanding of the metaphysics of powers — properties such as fragility and electric charge. The metaphysics of powers is a fast developing research field with fundamental questions at the forefront of current research, such as Can there be a world of only powers? What is the manifestation of a power? Are powers and their manifestations related by necessity? What are the prospects for dispositional accounts of causation? The papers focus on (...)
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  • (1 other version)Doing and being: an interpretation of Aristotle's Metaphysics theta.Jonathan B. Beere - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Doing and Being confronts the problem of how to understand two central concepts of Aristotle's philosophy: energeia and dunamis.
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  • Aristotle's theory of material substance: heat and pneuma, form and soul.Gad Freudenthal - 1995 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book offers an original new account of one of Aristotle's central doctrines. Freudenthal He recreates from Aristotle's writings a more complete theory of material substance which is able to explain the problematical areas of the way matter organizes itself and the persistence of matter, to show that the hitherto ignored concept of vital heat is as central in explaining material substance as soul or form.
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  • (1 other version)Do Powers Need Powers to Make Them Powerful? From Pandispositionalism to Aristotle.Anna Marmodoro - 2009 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 26 (4):337-352.
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  • Pneuma and Ether in Aristotle’s Philosophy of Living Nature.Abraham Bos - 2002 - Modern Schoolman 79 (4):255-276.
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  • Ways of Being: Potentiality and Actuality in Aristotle’s Metaphysics.Charlotte Witt - 2003 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    Aristotle's defense of Dunamis -- Power and potentiality -- Rational and nonrational powers -- The priority of actuality -- Ontological hierarchy, normativity, and gender.
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  • Physiology.Armelle Debru - 2008 - In R. J. Hankinson (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Galen. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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  • (1 other version)Περι αερων. [REVIEW]A. L. Peck - 1931 - The Classical Review 45 (5):179-180.
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  • (1 other version)Biomedical Models of Reproduction in the Fifth Century BC and Aristotle's Generation of Animals.Andrew Coles - 1995 - Phronesis 40 (1):48-88.
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  • Philosophy of nature.R. J. Hankinson - 2008 - In The Cambridge Companion to Galen. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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  • (1 other version)Galen and the Best of All Possible Worlds.R. J. Hankinson - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (01):206-.
    Voltaire's Pangloss, the man who held among other things that noses were clearly created in order to support spectacles, is the very archetype of the lunatic teleologist; a caricature of sublimely confident faith in the general and undeniable goodness of the world's arrangement, a faith that managed astoundingly to survive the Lisbon earthquake and his own subsequent auto dafé. Voltaire, of course, is poking fun at such conceptions; and, no doubt, in their extreme sanguinity as well as in their apparent (...)
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  • (1 other version)Galen and the Best of All Possible Worlds.R. J. Hankinson - 1989 - Classical Quarterly 39 (1):206-227.
    Voltaire's Pangloss, the man who held among other things that noses were clearly created in order to support spectacles, is the very archetype of the lunatic teleologist; a caricature of sublimely confident faith in the general and undeniable goodness of the world's arrangement, a faith that managed astoundingly to survive the Lisbon earthquake and his own subsequent auto dafé. Voltaire, of course, is poking fun at such conceptions; and, no doubt, in their extreme sanguinity as well as in their apparent (...)
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  • (1 other version)Biomedical Models of Reproduction in the Fifth Century BC and Aristotle's Generation of Animals.Andrew Coles - 1995 - Phronesis 40 (1):48-88.
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