Saved Papers

Save papers so you can find them more easily...


Join Now

Get instant access to our database of over 100,000 papers.

Join Now!

Aristotle's Definition Of Nature


Join Now
Credit Card
Join Now
PayPal
 

Aristotle's Definition of Nature


Nature, in its essence, is the cause/effect relationship offered to things with ascertainable objectivity, occurring without cause. From this we can logically state that the nature of something (something being an object with "thinghood", as humorously described in class) is its beginning, purpose and stereo-type.
There are two debatable definitions of nature, which under scrutiny are seemingly very similar. On the left hand, we have nature described as "the first, inchoate, thing belonging to it". Simply, an object's nature is it's core material – i.e., the nature of my couch would be polystyrene foam. On the other, we have nature described as "the shape or look". This statement points to nature as the stereo-type of an object, that is, my couch dose not have the nature of a couch until it assumes the look of a completed, stereo-typical couch. When examining these definitions it is hard to find a large degree of difference as the......

Join Now or Login to view the rest of this paper.

Approximate Word Count: 402
Approximate Pages: 2 (260 words per double-spaced page)

Why should you join TermPapersMonthly?
- It's secure and completely anonymous.
- You get instant access to over 100,000 papers.
- Prompt and helpful customer support.

Credit Card
PayPal