Aristotle on the Objects of Natural and Mathematical Sciences

Joshua Mendelsohn
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Abstract

In a series of recent papers, Emily Katz has argued that on Aristotle's view mathematical sciences are in an important respect no different from most natural sciences: They study sensible substances, but not qua sensible. In this paper, I argue that this is only half the story. Mathematical sciences are distinctive for Aristotle in that they study things ‘from’, ‘through’ or ‘in’ abstraction, whereas natural sciences study things ‘like the snub’. What this means, I argue, is that natural sciences must study properties as they occur in the subjects from which they are originally abstracted, even where they reify these properties and treat them as subjects. The objects of mathematical sciences, on the other hand, can be studied as if they did not really occur in an underlying subject. This is because none of the properties of mathematical objects depend on their being in reality features of the subjects from which they are abstracted, such as bodies and inscriptions. Mathematical sciences are in this way able to study what are in reality non-substances as if they were substances.
亚里士多德论自然科学和数学科学的对象
在最近的一系列论文中,艾米丽·卡茨(Emily Katz)认为,在亚里士多德的观点中,数学科学在一个重要方面与大多数自然科学没有什么不同:它们研究的是可感知的物质,但不是完全可感知的。在本文中,我认为这只是故事的一半。对亚里士多德来说,数学科学的独特之处在于,它们研究事物“从”、“通过”或“在”抽象中,而自然科学研究事物“像伤风一样”。我认为,这意味着自然科学必须研究它们最初被抽象出来的对象中出现的属性,即使它们将这些属性具体化并将其视为主体。另一方面,可以研究数学科学的对象,就好像它们并不真正发生在基础学科中一样。这是因为数学对象的任何属性都不依赖于它们在现实中的存在特征,比如它们被抽象出来的对象,比如物体和铭文。通过这种方式,数学科学能够研究实际上是非物质的东西,就好像它们是物质一样。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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