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Still others define their own position by their rejection of Aristotle’s views on essentialism, metaphysics, and natural science.. Theophrastus and the next head of the Lyceum, Strato, we

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where the conclusion of one subargument functions also

as a premiss in another But it is also a little wide, in

rela-tion to a sense of ‘argument’ commonly used in

philoso-phy, where the term refers to a complex of propositions

(usually a quite small and specific set) designated as

prem-isses and a conclusion

Also, the definition above can be implemented

some-what differently in different conversational contexts, for

several types of dispute can be involved One common

sense of ‘argument’ is that of a quarrelsome exchange of

verbal attacks and counter-attacks This is one

conversa-tional context of argument, but another context is the

more orderly type of exchange where each party has the

goal of justifying his or her own thesis, and questioning or

refuting the other party’s thesis, by reasoned means, using

accepted standards of evidence Argument of this kind,

used to resolve an initial conflict of opinions, takes place in

a critical discussion (van Eemeren and Grootendorst,

Argumentation, Communication and Fallacies) In contrast,

argument to bargain over goods or services takes place in

a negotiation But basically, in an argument, some key

proposition is held to be in doubt, in contrast to an

explan-ation, for example, where the proposition to be explained

is generally taken as granted, or at least not subject to

doubt or questioning, as far as the purpose of the

explan-ation is concerned

In a deductively valid argument, the link between the

premisses and the conclusion is strict in the sense that the

conclusion must be true in every case in which the

prem-isses are true, barring any exception In such an argument,

the conclusion follows from the premisses by logical

necessity A traditional example is: ‘All men are mortal;

Socrates is a man; therefore Socrates is mortal’ The

prem-isses don’t have to be true, but if they are, the conclusion

has to be true

In an inductively strong argument, the link between the

premisses and the conclusion is based on probability, so

that if the premisses are true, then it can be said that the

conclusion is true with a degree of probability (usually

measured as a fraction between 0 and 1, the latter being

the value assigned to a deductively valid argument, the

limiting case)

In a presumptively *plausible argument, the link between

the premisses and the conclusion is based on burden of

proof, meaning that it is not known whether the

conclu-sion is true or not, but if the premisses are true, that is

enough of a provisional, practical basis for acting as

though the conclusion were true, in the absence of

evi-dence showing it to be false Presumptively plausible

arguments are species of arguments from ignorance that

should be treated with caution, because of their

provi-sional nature, making them subject to default, and even in

some cases fallacious (Walton, Plausible Argument in

Every-day Conversation).

Presumptively plausible arguments are very common

in everyday conversation, and their abuse or erroneous

use is associated with many of the traditional informal

fal-lacies, familiar in logic textbooks A few of the more

com-mon types of presumptively plausible arguments are noted below, along with some traditional types of argu-ment and fallacy

Argument from sign derives a conclusion that some

fea-ture of a situation is present, based on some other observed feature that generally indicates its presence For example, ‘Here are (what appear to be) some bear tracks

in the snow; therefore a bear passed this way’

Argument from expert opinion creates a presumption that

a proposition is true, based on an appeal to the opinion of

a suitably qualified expert who has claimed that it is true More broadly, arguments are often based on appeals to authority of one kind or another, e.g judicial authority,

other than that of expertise Locke (in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding) identified a type of argument he called argumentum ad verecundiam (argument from respect

or modesty), which is ‘to allege the opinions of men whose parts, learning, eminency, power, or some other cause has gained a name and settled their reputation in the common esteem with some kind of authority’, and use this allegation to support one’s own opinion Locke does not say this is a fallacy, but he indicates how it could be used as a fallacy by someone who portrays anyone who disagrees with the appeal as insolent or immodest, having insufficient respect for authority

Argument from ethos puts forward a proposition as being

more plausible on the ground that it was asserted by a per-son with good character The negative version of this is

the abusive or personal ad hominem argument, which

claims that an argument is not plausible on the ground that the arguer who advocated it has a bad character (typ-ically bad character for veracity is emphasized) In the

Essay Locke defined the *argumentum ad hominem as

the tactic of pressing someone ‘with consequences drawn from his own principles or concessions’ This description

is closer to the variant usually called the circumstantial ad hominem argument, where a person’s argument is

ques-tioned or refuted on the grounds that his personal circum-stances are inconsistent with what he advocates in his argument For example, if a politician argues for wage cuts

in the public sector, but is unwilling to cut his own high salary, a critic may attack his argument by citing the osten-sible inconsistency

Argumentum ad ignorantiam (argument to ignorance) is

the argument that because a particular proposition has not been proved true (false), we may conclude that it is false (true) This is sometimes a legitimate kind of argu-mentation based on burden of proof For example, in a criminal trial, if it is not proved that the defendant is guilty,

it is concluded that she is not guilty However, if pressed ahead too aggressively, it can be used as a sophistical tac-tic For example, in the McCarthy hearings in the 1950s, absence of any disproof of communist connections was taken as evidence to show that some people were guilty of being communist sympathizers

Argumentum ad populum is the use of appeal to popular

opinion to support a conclusion It may take the form of appeal to group loyalties, popular trends of one kind or

50 arguments, types of

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another, or to customary ways of doing things This type

of argumentation is reasonable in many cases, but it can be

used as a sophistical tactic to bring pressure against an

opponent in argument, or to appeal to group interests or

loyalties in an emotional way, in lieu of presenting

stronger forms of evidence that should be provided

Argumentum ad misericordiam is the use of appeal to pity

to support one’s conclusion Such appeals are sometimes

appropriate, but too often they are used as sophistical

tac-tics to evade a burden of proof by diverting the line of

argument away from the real issue d.n.w

*deduction; induction; methods, Mill’s; slingshot,

argu-ments; testimony

Charles L Hamblin, Fallacies (London, 1970).

John Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690), ed.

P H Nidditch (Oxford, 1975)

Frans H van Eemeren and Rob Grootendorst, Argumentation,

Communication and Fallacies (Hillsdale, NJ, 1992).

Douglas N Walton, Plausible Argument in Everyday Conversation

(Albany, NY, 1992)

Aristippus(5th century bc) An associate of Socrates,

cele-brated as a defender and exemplar of a life of sensual

pleasure His advocacy of pleasure was taken up by the

Cyrenaic school (named after Aristippus’ native city of

Cyrene in North Africa), reputedly founded by his

grand-son, also called Aristippus The Cyrenaics maintained that

the supreme good is the pleasure of the moment, which

they identified with a physical process, a ‘smooth motion

of the flesh’ They supported their hedonism by the

argu-ment that all creatures pursue pleasure and avoid pain

This concentration on immediate pleasure reflected a

general scepticism, according to which only immediate

sensations could be known Concern with past or future

caused uncertainty and anxiety, and should therefore be

E Mannebach, Aristippi et Cyrenaicorum Fragmenta (Leiden, 1961).

aristocracy, natural. Rule by the members of a

long-established ruling class distinguished by ability, property,

and a privileged education which instils a high sense of

honour, responsibility, and public duty

Aristocracy is one of the three basic types of

govern-ment noted by the Greeks, the others being monarchy

(rule by one) and democracy (rule by the people)

Aristoc-racies can be based on heredity, wealth (oligarchy), or

merit (meritocracy) Some thinkers, especially Burke,

believe in the natural aristocracy of those whose place in

the social fabric has been established by stable hierarchical

values hallowed by time Such a view finds a friendly

envir-onment in some forms of *conservatism and can be seen

as the expression of a belief in the value of an *organic

soci-ety It is easy for critics on the left to make fun of the idea

because it can be depicted as the expression of entrenched

privilege and arbitrary power with no rational basis

Nevertheless, the belief in a natural aristocracy can be

combined with constitutional safeguards (as in Burke) and

its systematic destruction over the last fifty years by the

egalitarianism of the left and the managerialism of the right has not ushered in a glorious new era of public

E Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), ed Conor

Cruise O’Brien (Harmondsworth, 1968)

Aristotelianism.Aristotle’s philosophical influence spans the period from his death in 322 bc to today It has led to a wide range of different philosophical viewpoints, as his work has been interpreted and reinterpreted to fit differ-ent programmes and serve differing goals His thought has influenced the terminology of *philosophy itself: ‘syl-logism’, ‘premiss’, ‘conclusion’, ‘substance’, ‘essence’,

‘accident’, ‘metaphysics’, ‘species’, ‘genera’, ‘potentiality’,

‘categories’, ‘akrasia’, ‘dialectic’, and ‘analytic’ are all

terms taken over from Aristotle Many contemporary philosophers working on ethics, philosophy of mind and action, political philosophy, and metaphysics claim that their views are influenced by, or even derived from, Aris-totle’s own writings Still others define their own position

by their rejection of Aristotle’s views on essentialism, metaphysics, and natural science And this situation is not merely an artefact of current philosophical interests; it is one which has obtained through nearly the whole period

of Western philosophy since Aristotle’s death

The history of Aristotelianism has many phases Imme-diately after his death, his school (the Lyceum) remained a centre for scientific and philosophical study Theophras-tus succeeded him as its head, expanded on his biological researches by a study of botany, and also wrote a history

of physical theories and cosmology, while Eudemus com-posed the first history of mathematics and Aristoxenus wrote on music Theophrastus and the next head of the Lyceum, Strato, were independent thinkers, prepared to criticize Aristotle’s views, and to develop their own the-ories on basic issues There were sometimes as many as 2,000 students during this period, and internal debate flourished Zeno of Citium, the founder of the Stoa, said that Theophrastus’ chorus was larger than his own, but that the voices in his own chorus were in greater har-mony However, in the third century bc, other philosoph-ical schools emerged—the *Epicureans, *Stoics, and

*Sceptics—and took centre-stage, rejecting some of Aris-totle’s views and modifying others, and the influence of the Lyceum itself diminished

In the first century bc, Aristotle’s manuscripts were edited by Andronicus and his writings were widely stud-ied Between the second and sixth centuries ad a series of scholarly commentators studied Aristotle’s work with care and ingenuity, paying particular attention to his writ-ings on logical, physical, and metaphysical topics Alexan-der of Aphrodisias (second century ad), Porphyry (third centuryad), and Philoponus and Simplicius (sixth century ad) were amongst the most distinguished contributors to this tradition Some aimed not only to interpret Aristotle’s views, but also to criticize them Philoponus, in particular, developed a series of fundamental objections to Aristotle’s dynamics and attempted to develop his own account of

Aristotelianism 51

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change and movement This first renaissance of

Aris-totelianism declined after Justinian closed the schools of

philosophy at Athens in ad 529, although Aristotle was

actively studied in Constantinople for a longer period

The second great renaissance of Aristotelian thought in

western Europe began in the twelfth century ad, and

was prompted initially by Syrian and Arabic

scholar-philosophers who had discussed and developed Aristotle’s

scientific and metaphysical works Of these, the best

known are Avicenna (Ibn Sı¯na¯) and Averroës (Ibn Rushd),

‘the Commentator’, who produced commentaries on

nearly all of the works of Aristotle which we now possess

Averroës himself believed that Aristotle both initiated and

perfected the study of logic, natural science, and

meta-physics Latin translations of Arabic texts and

commen-taries on Aristotle began to reach Europe (via Spain) in this

period, and provoked widespread interest Initially,

Aris-totle was seen as a threat to Christian orthodoxy, and in

1210 the Council of Paris banned the study of his natural

philosophy and threatened to excommunicate anyone

who studied it However, the study of his writings

flour-ished under mild persecution, and was further stimulated

by the Crusaders’ discovery in Constantinople of many of

Aristotle’s manuscripts (as handed down from the Greek

commentators), which subsequently were skilfully

trans-lated into Latin and made more generally available

Within a few generations, Aristotle’s writings became one

of the mainstays of university life in Europe This was due

mainly to the enthusiasm and ability of two Dominicans,

Albert the Great (c.1200–80) and Thomas Aquinas

(1224/5–74), who sought to present the basic principles of

Aristotle’s philosophy in a systematic fashion and to

inte-grate it (as far as possible) with Christian and

contempor-ary scientific thought Albertus aimed to give an account

of the whole of nature in Aristotelian terms, to capture

what Aristotle would have said had he been alive and

well-informed in the thirteenth century ad Aquinas’s goal was

to distinguish what was fundamentally sound in

Aris-totle’s philosophical writings from certain of the

conclu-sions which he actually drew For example, while Aquinas

(as a Christian) wished to reject Aristotle’s view that the

world had no beginning, he argued that it was by

revela-tion alone that one could know the relevant facts Thus,

he upheld Aristotle’s criticism of his predecessors’

theor-ies that the world had a beginning on the grounds that no

philosophical argument could establish what had in fact

occurred Aquinas aimed to reconcile religion and

phil-osophy, and to produce a wide-ranging synthesis of

Aris-totelian philosophy, Christianity, and the current

scientific thinking of his day

The success of Aquinas’s synthesis ensured that for a

time Aristotle held the pre-eminent position in Western

philosophy He was regarded for several centuries as the

supreme philosopher, ‘the master of those who know’, as

Dante called him However, the effect of this synthesis

was in many ways pernicious After the thirteenth century

Aristotle came to represent the status quo in philosophy

and science, and to be identified with dogmatic resistance

to further speculation and scientific discovery Naturally, critics arose: in Oxford, William of Ockham and, in Paris, Jean Buridan and Albert of Saxony amongst others By the end of the fourteenth century, they had (like Philoponus before them) criticized Aristotle’s dynamics and the astro-nomical theories constructed on this basis The way was open for Copernicus and Galileo to undermine these parts

of Aristotle’s physical theories Perhaps the nadir of this form of Aristotelianism was reached when Cremonini, a leading Aristotelian in Padua, refused to look through Galileo’s telescope because he suspected that what he saw would conflict with his own theories In the seventeenth century, Francis Bacon, Galileo, and Boyle developed more general attacks against Aristotelianism, accusing it

of a resistance to scientific method and empirical observa-tion Hobbes complained of Aristotle’s continuing influ-ence with considerable veheminflu-ence ‘I believe that scarce anything can be more absurdly said in natural philosophy,

than that which is now called Aristotle’s Metaphysics nor more ignorantly, than a great part of his Ethics’ (Leviathan,iv xlvi)

It is something of a paradox that Aristotle was criticized

by John Locke and Francis Bacon for lack of interest in sci-entific method and empirical observation He had, after all, pioneered the empirical science of biology, and had written at length about the importance of ensuring that one’s theories are true to appearances and consistent with the reputable opinions of the relevant experts His reputa-tion in natural science suffered because of the narrow-minded attempts of the Aristotelians ofthe seventeenth century to defend every aspect of his physical theory Their ultra-conservative approach prompted a radical rejection of central contentions of Aristotle’s metaphysics and epistemology A century later, Bishop Berkeley noted judiciously: ‘In these free-thinking times, many an empty head is shook at Aristotle and Plato, as well as at Holy Scriptures And the writings of those celebrated ancients are by most men treated on a foot with the dry and bar-barous lucubrations of the Schoolmen.’ In this way, the successful criticism of the most speculative features of Aristotle’s dynamics prompted a major sea-change in the development of Western philosophy The starting-point for philosophical thinking after Descartes came to be sub-jective experience and the challenge of scepticism, rather than man understood as a distinctive species of animal in a world of substances, essences, and natural kinds with their own causal powers Indeed, from a post-Cartesian view-point many of Aristotle’s central concepts appeared ungrounded or epistemologically insecure

Aristotle’s influence was not undermined in all areas

At a time when his metaphysical doctrines were under sustained attack, the German educationalist Philip

Melanchthon (1497–1560) referred to the Ethics as a

sem-inal document, and made it essential reading in German universities Later in the German philosophical tradition, Hegel and Marx were enthusiastic students of Aristotle Indeed, Marx was sometimes described as a left-wing Aristotelian

52 Aristotelianism

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Aristotle’s Poetics exercised a powerful influence on the

seventeenth-century French dramatists Corneille and

Racine, who attempted to construct tragedies according

to his precepts Corneille went so far as to say that

Aris-totle’s dramatic principles were valid ‘for all peoples and for

all times’ In nineteenth-century biology, Darwin was so

deeply impressed with Aristotle’s biological observations

and theories that he remarked that while ‘Linnaeus and

Cuvier have been my gods, they were mere schoolboys to

old Aristotle’ However, these remarks were exceptions to

an intellectual climate in which Aristotle’s central claims

about scientific explanation, metaphysics, and logic were

rejected either in whole or in part Indeed, Darwin’s own

work appeared to undermine the need for Aristotle’s style

of teleological explanation of biological phenomena

The last two centuries have seen several major

devel-opments in Aristotelian studies In the nineteenth

cen-tury, scholars sought to establish a secure text of his

surviving books, culminating in the Berlin edition,

pub-lished from 1831 onwards Later writers tended to see

Aristotle not as propounding one finished philosophical

system, but as developing and modifying his views

throughout the treatises Others focused with increasing

rigour on Aristotle’s discussion of particular issues in his

Ethics or Metaphysics, or more recently his biological

works, without assuming that they all fit perfectly into

one package of ideas There has been, in these respects, an

attempt to formulate clear and precise accounts of

Aris-totle’s views, rather than to rest content with the ‘Aristotle

of legend’ It is perhaps no accident in this context that the

last few years have seen renewed scholarly interest in the

Greek commentators of the first Aristotelian renaissance

What is the current position of ‘Aristotelianism’ in

modern philosophy? In several areas, his influence

remains strong and alive I shall only comment on two

1 Philosophy of Action, Moral Psychology Many

contempor-ary philosophers have been influenced directly by

Aris-totle’s pioneering discussions of a variety of issues The

philosophy of *action contains a variety of questions:

What counts as an action? How are actions individuated?

What is to count as an intentional action or a rational

action? Can there be intentional but irrational actions

(*akrasia)? Further issues concern the explanation of

intentional action: Is it to be explained causally, or in a

dis-tinctive manner (rational explanation)? Are the

explanan-tia desires or beliefs, and which are explanatorily more

basic? How are such psychological states related to

under-lying physical states? On each of these issues, Aristotle has

a distinctive and interesting answer Philosophers as

diverse as Austin, Anscombe, von Wright, and Davidson,

who reopened these issues in the late twentieth century,

have found much to use in Aristotle’s discussions But his

sustained and detailed analysis of these problems repays

study on its own account

His interest in ontological issues led him to develop an

account of the nature and identity of processes, states,

activities, and actions which differs from the alternatives

canvassed in modern debates In analysing intentional action, he gave an important role to efficient causation, but saw this as fully consistent with the recognition of the role of agents’ knowledge and teleological (or rational) explanation Where modern discussions represent these

as rival explanatory schemes, Aristotle portrayed them as

complementary His discussion of akrasia focuses on the

issue of how akratic action is possible and how it is to be explained—whether in terms of a failure of intellect or imagination, or in terms of desires not fully integrated into one’s picture of well-being This discussion stands com-parison with even the best modern work Aristotle is aiming to account for a wide range of cases (some involving failure of intellect, others separate failures of motivation)

in a way which does justice to the variety of the phenom-ena of ordinary experience But at the same time he seeks

to develop a theory of practical reasoning and virtue which shows how the akratic is irrational and to be censured The range and subtlety of Aristotle’s account is evident throughout his discussion of virtue and self-control, which has received considerable attention from contemporary philosophers (such as John McDowell and Philippa Foot) Similar claims can be made for his discus-sions of the interconnection between psychological and physical states Aristotle is engaging with precisely the issues which concern contemporary opponents of materi-alist reduction who wish to avoid (Platonic or Cartesian)

*dualism In these areas, Aristotle not only initiated philo-sophical discussion but provided a framework within which much contemporary work can be located and better understood

2 Metaphysical Issues Contemporary discussion, mainly

prompted by two American philosophers, Saul Kripke and Hilary Putnam, has done much to refocus attention on to the Aristotelian issues of *substance, *essence, and *nat-ural kinds Kripke and Putnam share a range of assump-tions with Aristotle Terms such as ‘man’ or ‘gold’ have their significance because they signify a distinct natural kind whenever they are coherently uttered They could not retain their significance and apply to a different object or kind Aristotle accepted this as a consequence of his account of signification in which the thoughts (with which these terms are conventionally correlated) are ‘likened’ to objects or kinds in the world But what makes these kinds and objects the same whenever they were specified? At this point, Aristotle developed his metaphysical theory of substance and essence to answer this question and thus to underwrite and legitimize his account of names Modern authors have highlighted the linguistic and semantic data from which Aristotle began his account; but few (if any) have attempted to present such a systematic metaphysical basis for their semantic claims In this respect, his project is

at least as detailed and developed as those currently on offer At the very least it indicates what a systematic the-ory of essence would be like

Aristotle advanced his metaphysical claims apparently untroubled by sceptical doubts of the kind which

Aristotelianism 53

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undermined the first great period of Aristotelianism (in

third-centurybc Athens) and the third (in western Europe

in the seventeenth century ad) Perhaps it was because he

was so little concerned by *scepticism that he was able to

develop his metaphysical theory in the way he did

How-ever, from a modern perspective, this may not seem the

major mistake it was once taken to be Aristotle was not

disturbed by global scepticism because (in his view) we

had to be in cognitive contact with the world for our basic

terms (such as ‘man’ or ‘gold’) to make sense Our

thoughts had to be ‘likened’ to objects and kinds in the

world for them to be the thoughts they are, or for our

terms to make sense to us From the Aristotelian

stand-point, global scepticism seems something of a trick: it

assumes that we understand terms with meanings which

they could only have if we were in reliable cognitive

con-tact with the world, and then proceeds to raise sceptical

doubts about the reliability of that cognitive contact This

anti-sceptical feature of Aristotle’s thinking made it

unappealing in an earlier age when philosophers raised

sceptical doubts with scant concern for the question how

our thoughts can have the content they do But it is

precisely this aspect of Aristotle’s philosophy, together

with its attendant interest in metaphysical issues, which

makes it strikingly relevant today In these areas,

Aris-totle’s influence on contemporary philosophy appears

stronger and more benign today than it has been at

any time since the anti-Aristotelian revolution of the

D Charles, Aristotle’s Philosophy of Action (London, 1984).

G E R Lloyd, Aristotle: The Growth and Structure of his Thought

(Cambridge, 1968)

R Sorabji, Time, Creation and the Continuum (London, 1983).

J L Stocks, Aristotelianism (Boston, 1925).

Aristotle(384–322bc) Aristotle was born at Stagira in

Chalcidice in northern Greece His father was a doctor

whose patients included Amyntas, King of Macedonia At

the age of 17, Aristotle went to Athens to study under

Plato, and remained at the *Academy for nearly twenty

years until Plato’s death in 348/7 When Speusippus

suc-ceeded Plato as its head, Aristotle left Athens, lived for a

while in Assos and Mytilene, and then was invited to

return to Macedonia by Philip to tutor Alexander

Aris-totle returned to Athens in 335 at the age of 49, and

founded his own philosophical school He worked there

for twelve years until Alexander’s death in 323, when the

Athenians in strongly anti-Macedonian mood brought a

formal charge of impiety against him Aristotle escaped

with his life to Chalcis, but died there in the following

year at the age of 62 He married twice, and had a son,

Nicomachus, by his second wife

Aristotle’s philosophical interests covered an extremely

wide area He composed major studies of logic, ethics, and

metaphysics, but also wrote on epistemology, physics,

biology, meteorology, dynamics, mathematics,

psych-ology, rhetoric, dialectic, aesthetics, and politics Many of

his treatises constitute an attempt to see the topics

studied through the perspective of one set of fundamental concepts and ideas All reflect similar virtues: a careful weighing of arguments and considerations, acute insight,

a sense of what is philosophically plausible, and a desire

to separate and classify distinct issues and phenomena They also exhibit considerable reflection on the nature

of philosophical activity and the goals of philosophy itself

Aristotle’s philosophical development is difficult to determine chronologically He probably worked on a range of concerns simultaneously, and did not always see clearly how far his thinking on logic or philosophy of sci-ence fitted with his current work on (for example) meta-physics or biology He may have returned more than once

to similar topics, and added to existing drafts in a piece-meal fashion at different times It is, in general, more fruit-ful to inquire how far different elements in his thinking cohere rather than what preceded what Further, many of his extant works read more like notebooks of work in progress or notes for discussion than books finished and ready for publication His writings (like Wittgenstein’s) reflect the activity of thinking itself, uncluttered by rhetoric or stylistic affectation Their consequent fresh-ness of tone should make one cautious of accepting over-regimented accounts of his overall project: for it may well have been developing as he proceeded

In what follows, I shall aim to introduce a few of Aris-totle’s leading ideas in three areas only: logic and phil-osophy of science, ethics, and metaphysics While these subjects differ widely, there is considerable overlap of concerns and interests between them

Logic and Philosophy of Science Aristotle was the first to

develop the study of deductive inference He defined the

*syllogism as a ‘discourse in which certain things having been stated, something else follows of necessity from their being so’ Syllogisms are deductively valid arguments, and include both arguments of the form:

All as are b, All bs are c, All as are c,

and

as are red,

as are coloured.

Both these arguments are perfect syllogisms since nothing

needs to be added to make clear what necessarily follows

By contrast, arguments form imperfect syllogisms when

more needs to be added beyond the premisses to make clear that the conclusion follows of necessity It is a dis-tinctive feature of Aristotle’s account that it takes as its starting-point the notion of ‘following of necessity’, which

is not itself defined in formal or axiomatic terms If this notion has a further basis, it lies in Aristotle’s semantical account of the predicate as what affirms that a given property belongs to a substance (and so rests on his meta-physics of substance and property)

54 Aristotelianism

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Aristotle focused on perfect syllogisms which share a

certain form involving three terms: two premisses and a

conclusion Examples of such syllogisms are (reading

downwards):

All as are b, All as are b, Some as are b, Some as are b,

All bs are c, No bs are c, All bs are c, No bs are c,

All as are c No a is c Some as are c Not all as are c.

He claimed that other syllogisms with a similar form and

the same crucial terms (‘all’, ‘some’, ‘none’, ‘not all’) could

be expressed using one of these perfect cases if one adds

three conversion rules:

From No bs are a infer No as are b.

From All bs are a infer Some as are b.

From Some bs are a infer Some as are b.

Finally, he proposed that any deductively valid argument

can be expressed in one of the four obvious perfect

syllo-gisms specified above or reduced to these by means of the

conversion rules If so, any such argument can be

refor-mulated as one of the basic cases of perfect syllogisms in

which the conclusion obviously follows of necessity

Aristotle was interested in this logical system in part

because he was interested in explanation (or

demonstra-tion) Every *demonstration is a syllogism, but not every

syllogism is a demonstration In a demonstration, the aim

is to explain why the conclusion is true Thus, if the

con-clusion states that (for example) trees of a given type are

deciduous, the premiss of the relevant demonstration will

state this is so because their sap solidifies If no further

explanation can be given of why their leaves fall, this

premiss states the basic nature of their shedding leaves

Premisses in demonstrations are absolutely prior, when

no further explanation can be offered of why they are true

These constitute the starting-points for explanation in a

given area

Aristotle’s ideas about the nature of valid inference and

explanation form the basis of his account of the form a

suc-cessful science should take In terms of these, he outlined

an account of what each thing’s essence is (the feature

which provides the fundamental account of its other

genu-ine properties), of how things should be defined (in terms

of their basic explanatory features), and of the ideal of a

complete science in which a set of truths is represented as

a sequence of consequences drawn from a few basic

pos-tulates or common principles These ideas, which

under-lie his Analytics, determined the course of logic and

philosophy of science, and to some extent that of science

itself, for two millennia

Aristotle’s system has its own shortcomings and

idio-syncrasies His treatment of the syllogistic does not

exhaust all of logic, and not all arguments of a developed

science can be formulated into the favoured Aristotelian

form His system was a pioneering one which required

supplementation It was unfortunate, not least for his own

subsequent reputation, that it came to be regarded as the

complete solution to all the problems it raised

It is important to note that Aristotle’s logical project

was directly connected with his metaphysical goals His

aim was to develop a logical theory for a natural language capable of describing the fundamental types of object required for a full understanding of reality (individual sub-stances, species, processes, states, etc.) He had no interest

in artificial languages, which speak of entities beyond his favoured metaphysical and epistemological theory His goal was rather to develop a logical theory ‘of a piece’ with his philosophical conception of what exists in the world and how it can be understood In this respect, his goals differ markedly from those of metalogicians since Frege, who speak of artificial as well as natural languages, and domains of objects unconstrained by any privileged metaphysics

Ethics and Politics Aristotle’s Ethics contains several major

strands

1 It aims to give a reflective understanding of *well-being or the good life for humans

2 It suggests that well-being consists in excellent activ-ity such as intellectual contemplation and virtuous actions stemming from a virtuous character Virtuous action is what the person with practical wisdom would choose; and the practically wise are those who can deliberate

success-fully towards well-being This might be termed the Aris-totelian circle, as the key terms (well-being, virtue, and

practical wisdom) appear to be interdefined

3 It develops a theory of virtue (*arete¯) which aims to

explain the fact that what is good seems so to the virtuous Aristotle examines the characteristic roles of desire, goals, imagination, emotion, and intuition in the choices and intentional actions of the virtuous, and explains in these terms how virtue differs from self-control, incontinence

(*akrasia), and self-indulgence This is a study in moral

psychology and epistemology, involving detailed discus-sion of particular virtues involved in the good life Each of these is important but controversial, and Aris-totle’s own viewpoint is far from clear Sometimes it appears that the self-sufficient contemplation (of truth) by the individual sage constitutes the ideal good life, but else-where man is represented as a ‘political animal’ who needs friendship and other-directed virtues (such as courage, generosity, and justice) if he is to achieve human well-being On occasion, Aristotle seems to found his account

of the good life on background assumptions about human nature, but elsewhere bases his account of human nature

on what it is good for humans to achieve He remarks that the virtuous see what is good, but elsewhere writes that what is good is so because it appears good to the virtuous One way (there are many) to fit these strands together runs as follows The paradigm case of activity which mani-fests well-being is intellectual contemplation, and every-thing else that is an element in the good life is in some relevant way like intellectual contemplation Practical wisdom is akin to theoretical activity: both are excellences

of the rational intellect, both involve a proper grasp of first principles and the integration of relevant psychological states, and both require a grasp of truth in their respective areas Intellectual contemplation is the activity which best

Aristotle 55

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exemplifies what is good for humans; anything else which

is good for us in some way resembles it

But what counts as truth in practical matters? Is this is to

be understood merely as what seems to be the case to the

virtuous agent? Alternatively, practical truth might be

taken as a basic notion Or perhaps the virtuous agent is

the proper judge because the virtue she possesses, when

allied with practical wisdom, constitutes part of

well-being On this view, the interconnections between virtue

and well-being would explain why her practical reasoning

is as it is (in a way consistent with reputable and

well-established opinion) This preserves the analogy with

truth in theoretical matters, where inter-connections

between kinds, essences, and causal powers explain why

our theoretical reasoning is as it is (in a way consistent

with reputable opinion) While the third of these

interpret-ations captures substantial parts of Aristotle’s discussion,

he proceeds with characteristic caution and appears

reluctant to commit himself finally on this issue

Aristotle wrote his Ethics as a prolegomenon to his

study of Politics This too reflects his interest in virtue and

well-being, but also contains several other major themes

Thus Aristotle holds the following theses

1 A city state has as its goal well-being, and the ideal

constitution is one in which every citizen achieves

well-being

2 In practice, *democracy is preferable to oligarchy

because it is more stable and its judgements are likely to be

wiser since individuals when grouped together have more

wisdom than a few

3 The practice of slavery, with regard to both ‘natural’

and ‘non-natural’ slaves required to till the soil and

main-tain the state (1330a32–3), is justifiable

4 Plato’s ‘communist’ society of guardians in the

Republic is to be condemned because it leads to social

dis-turbances, undermines private property and friendship,

‘which is the greatest safeguard against revolution’, and is

unobtainable

What holds these diverse views together? Sometimes,

Aristotle writes as if his aim is for each citizen to achieve

the perfectionist goals set out in the Ethics However, his

commitment to this ideal is mitigated by other factors

including the need for stability and social harmony When

these conflict (as in his discussion of non-natural slaves),

he does not give authority to perfectionist values in a

direct or systematic way It may be that Aristotle thought

that there would be more excellent activity in the long run

if considerations of harmony and stability were taken

ser-iously But he fails to spell this out or to specify in detail the

distributional policies which are to be implemented by the

wise rulers who hold power in his preferred constitution

While the Politics contains many influential remarks, such

as those condemning the practice of lending money for

profit and analysing the nature of revolutions, it is

incom-plete as a work of political theory It also exhibits some of

the less attractive aspects of perfectionist theory: if people

lack the abilities required for a life of excellence, they are

natural slaves rightfully deprived of the basic freedoms enjoyed by those with higher-grade capacities Similarly, if children are born with serious physical handicaps, they are

to be left to die Aristotle does not seriously address the intuitions of liberty or equality of treatment which run contrary to the demands of perfectionist theory in these cases

Metaphysics and Biology Aristotle’s metaphysical

pro-posals have a number of different sources Three of them can be summarized as follows

1 Aristotle’s logical system (as set out above) required

a metaphysical underpinning—an account of species, sub-stances, and essences—to underwrite his treatment of logical necessity and demonstration The same was true of his semantical discussion of the signification of names and the principle of non-contradiction Names signify (in his view) substances with essences ‘Man’ has the significance

it does because it signifies the same species on all occasions when it is used But what makes this the same species is that it possesses a distinctive essence which it cannot lack The kind occupies its own slot in the intelligible structure

of the world in virtue of its possession of this essence The

*essence is the fundamental feature which makes the

*substance what it is, and explains the other properties of the substance Aristotle was faced with two problems: he required a metaphysical account of substances, species, and essence to sustain this view, and a psychological account of how we grasp these substances and kinds (The

latter issue is addressed in De anima, where Aristotle

pro-posed that our thoughts and perceptions are of objects and kinds when we are in appropriate causal contact with them, and are thus ‘likened’ to them.)

2 Aristotle was convinced that *teleological explan-ation was the key to the proper study of natural organisms What determined a thing’s nature was what counted as its successful operation: its achieving what it is good for it to achieve (as is implicit in his ethical writings) These goals, and being organized so as to achieve them, is what makes the species the one it is Some goals are extrinsic; the goal

of an axe is to cut wood, and this explains the arrangement

of the metal in the axe But the teleological goal of man is

to live a life of a given kind (e.g of rational activity), and the rest of his nature is designed so as to achieve this intrin-sic goal The distinctive goal of each biological kind is what determines its respective essence

3 Aristotle’s critical study of Plato’s theory of *univer-sals had convinced him that univer*univer-sals could not exist by themselves, but only in particular things Since substances must be capable of independent existence, it appears that they cannot be universals but must be particulars However, this generated a dilemma since Aristotle also believed that only universals were definable and the

objects of scientific knowledge (in the Analytics model).

Thus if substances are knowable, they cannot be particu-lars But now it looks as if substances cannot exist at all since they cannot be either universals or particulars Aris-totle’s dilemma arises because he was tempted to regard

56 Aristotle

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particular substances as ontologically primary, while (at

the same time) insisting that understanding and definition

are of universals The latter thought he shared with Plato;

but the former is very much his own, and one which led to

a fundamentally different account of numbers and

univer-sals than the one Plato offered

In addressing the first two issues, Aristotle needed to

represent the essences of substances in a way which

respected two ideas: (a) that each substance has one

fun-damental feature which causes its other features to be as

they are, (b) this feature is teleologically basic Form is the

candidate proposed as the relevant essence of substances,

composed of form and matter But is the form particular

or universal? How is it related to matter? Is it itself one

uni-tary thing? These questions dominate Aristotle’s

reflec-tions in the Metaphysics, and parts of his account of the soul

in De anima and natural kinds in the biological writings.

Aristotle’s discussion of these issues has generated

sev-eral major scholarly controversies First, did he take the

notion of one unified substance as basic, and regard its

matter and form as abstractions from this basic notion? Or

did he regard form and matter as independent

starting-points which, when related in a given way, yield a unified

substance? Second, if each individual substance’s form is

unique, how is the form itself individuated? Is its identity

fixed independently of the matter (or the composite) it

informs? Or is it rather a distinct form precisely because it

is the result of a general form informing certain quantities

of matter? Third, did Aristotle regard general forms as

abstractions from the forms of particular substances,

which served as his basic case? Or is the order of

explan-ation reversed, general forms taken as explanatorily prior

and forms of particular substances derived from general

forms enmattered in particular quantities of matter?

One approach (there are again many) takes general

forms as explanatorily basic, and construes particular

forms as the result of their instantiation in different

quan-tities of matter On this view, Aristotle regards form and

matter as prior to the composite substance, while

main-taining as a separate thesis that universals cannot exist

uninstantiated Composites such as humans are to be

understood as the result of the operation of form on

mat-ter They are composed from arms and legs, composed in

turn from flesh and blood, themselves composed from

basic elements At each level above the lowest, the

rele-vant entities are defined by representing the matter as

serving certain teleological goals While matter is

described as potentiality, this means no more than that it

can be informed in favourable conditions This

perspec-tive is at work in The Parts of Animals and De anima,

yielding a distinctive picture of the soul and of animal The

teleological operations which introduce such phenomena

as desire or perception are not definable in terms of

effi-cient causation, but refer essentially to the creature’s own

goals, such as well-being or survival Nor can they be

defined as ‘whatever plays a given role in a system of

explanation’, as they are genuine entities in their own

right with their own causal powers and essential features

On this view, Aristotle is neither offering a reductive account of psychological states, nor regarding them as inexplicable or mysterious (as in Platonic dualism) These scholarly issues remain highly controversial, and are at the centre of current debate Other more general problems are raised by Aristotle’s discussion First, is it possible to explain the unity or identity of a particular sub-stance at all? Second, what is the nature of a metaphysical explanation which Aristotle is seeking? He appears to offer

a constructive account of higher-order states, in some way intermediate between reductionism and dualism But is this a genuine alternative, and how is the relevant construction itself constrained? Third, is there always one teleologically basic feature which explains the presence and nature of the other genuine properties of substances?

As already indicated, Aristotle made substantial progress with each of these questions in his treatises on psychology and biology Indeed, much of their philosoph-ical interest lies in tracing how far he succeeded in explaining the nature of the relevant phenomena in terms

of his central concepts and favoured methodology The results, particularly in his psychological writings, are often exciting and compelling but sometimes inconclusive Aristotle encountered serious difficulties in his study of biological natural kinds He did not succeed in finding one basic feature to explain the remainder of their genuine

properties (as required by the Analytics model) Thus, he

saw that fish are so constituted as to fulfil a range of diverse functions—swimming, feeding, reproducing, living in water—which cannot all easily be unified in a unitary

essence of the type proposed in the Analytics The model

he had developed to analyse physical pheno-mena (such as thunder) could not be applied without major changes

to central aspects of the biological world Aristotle’s commitment to teleological explanation generated results apparently contrary to the guiding idea of non-complex

unifying forms proposed in the Metaphysics It is not

clear whether he believed that these problems could be overcome, or concluded that the model of explanation which applied elsewhere could not successfully analyse biological kinds He did not succeed in integrating all his beliefs into a complete and unified theory

Aristotle’s writings in metaphysics, morals, biology, and psychology are unified by common interests in *nat-ural kinds, teleology, and essence, but they are not parts of the seamless web of a perfectly unified and finished the-ory Aristotle was too cautious and scrupulous a thinker to carry through a ‘research programme’ without constant refinement and attention to recalcitrant detail In this respect his writings seem to reflect the nature of

*logic, traditional

J L Ackrill, Aristotle the Philosopher (Oxford, 1981).

J Barnes (ed.), The Complete Works of Aristotle, i and ii (Princeton,

NJ, 1984)

—— (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle (Cambridge,

1995)

Aristotle 57

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A Gotthelf and J Lennox (eds.), Philosophical Issues in Aristotle’s

Biology (Cambridge, 1987).

T H Irwin, Aristotle’s First Principles (Oxford, 1988).

R Sorabji, Necessity, Cause and Blame (London, 1980).

W D Ross, Aristotle (Oxford, 1923).

arithmetic, foundations of.Arithmetic is the study of the

natural numbers—0, 1, 2, 3, and so on A foundation for

arithmetic can serve three interconnected interests: an

interest in rigorous axiomatization, an epistemological

interest in the source and justification of our knowledge of

the *numbers, and an ontological interest in the nature of

the numbers

Dedekind, and, following him, Peano, dissected the

concept of the progression of the natural numbers and

for-mulated an axiomatic foundation for arithmetic, now

known, unfairly, as the Peano axioms The idea behind an

axiomatic foundation is to set down a small number of

axioms, expressed using a small number of primitive,

non-logical terms, from which other sentences can be

deduced The primitive terms used are ‘0’ (0 is the first

nat-ural number), ‘successor’ (the successor of 0 is 1, the

suc-cessor of 1 is 2, etc.) and ‘natural number’, and the five

axioms are:

1 0 is a natural number

2 The successor of any natural number is a natural

number

3 No two natural numbers have the same successor

4 0 is not the successor of any natural number

5 For any property P, if (i) 0 has P and (ii) the successor

of any natural number which has P also has P, then

every natural number has P (the principle of

math-ematical induction)

This informal axiomatic foundation organizes and

regi-ments arithmetical truths within an economical system It

can be formalized by translating the axioms into a formal

language from which theorems can be deduced via

rigor-ous proofs (though Gödel’s *incompleteness theorem

limits the success of any such formal axiomatization)

How is our knowledge of arithmetical truths to be

explained? An axiomatic foundation provides a partial

answer: assuming that the axioms are known, then

know-ledge of theorems is logical knowknow-ledge of the logical

con-sequences of the axioms The outstanding question is:

how do we know the axioms? According to the Euclidean

paradigm, we know the axioms because they are

self-evident, but this is an unsatisfactory answer because

judgements of self-evidence are notoriously fallible

Rather than appeal to self-evidence right away, Frege

developed his *logicism The logicist project has three

parts: define the vocabulary of arithmetic solely in terms

of the vocabulary of logic, identify the natural numbers

with ‘logical objects’, and deduce Peano’s axioms as the

logical consequences of logical axioms Thus the logicist

project grounds knowledge of arithmetical truth on

knowledge of logical axioms which Frege held to be

self-evident This explanation was ripped apart by *Russell’s

paradox which demonstrated that Frege’s logic is incon-sistent and which initiated the vigorous foundational research of the early twentieth century

The very idea of an epistemological foundation for arithmetic can be questioned; for example, ‘2 + 2 = 4’ is more obvious and certain than any recondite set of axioms

of logic or set theory from which it may be deduced Nevertheless, an account of the ontological foundation of arithmetic is compulsory Prima facie, arithmetical truths are truths about objects—the numbers What sort of objects are they? They do not seem to be either physical or mental objects because there might not be enough of those to serve as the numbers and because the numbers are thought to be necessary existents unlike physical or mental objects Thus the numbers appear to be *abstract entities, as the Platonist would have us believe: either a

sui generis progression or one drawn from a more extensive

kind of abstract object such as sets, but in each case having

no causal powers Now epistemological problems resur-face since there is no agreed account of how our know-ledge of abstract objects is possible a.d.o

P Benacerraf and H Putnam (eds.), Philosophy of Mathematics,

2nd edn (Cambridge, 1983)

G Frege, The Foundations of Arithmetic, tr J L Austin, 2nd edn.

(Oxford, 1953)

I Lakatos, ‘Infinite Regress and the Foundations of

Mathemat-ics’, in Mathematics, Science and Epistemology, ed J Worral and

G Currie (Cambridge, 1978)

M Potter, Reason’s Nearest Kin: Philosophies of Arithmetic from Kant

to Carnap (Oxford, 2002).

arkhe¯.A ‘first thing from which something is, or comes to

be, or is known’ (Aristotle, Metaphysics v 1013a18–19) Applied to materials which do not arise out of anything more primitive, to causes of change, to propositions fun-damental in deductive systems, by teleologists to benefits and beneficiaries, and, colloquially, since they are sources

of initiatives in states, to governments Kinds of arkhe¯

are as numerous as ways of explaining or senses of

*first cause argument

Armstrong, D M.(1926– ) Australian philosopher, Offi-cer of the Order of Australia, and one of the dominant fig-ures in the school sometimes known as Australian materialism Armstrong was one of the first to advocate

*functionalism as a theory of the mind, and to combine that view with *materialism In metaphysics, he has defended a distinctive version of realism about *univer-sals Armstrong’s view is that there are philosophical rea-sons for believing in the existence of universals, but universals do not exist independently of the particulars that instantiate them, and which universals exist is an empirical question This view has been in the background

of his later work on scientific laws, and on the nature of modality Armstrong’s metaphysical realism, his vigorous defence of empirical metaphysics, and his clear, argument-based philosophical style show the influence of John

58 Aristotle

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Anderson—of whom Gilbert Ryle reputedly said ‘he

thinks there are only brass tacks’ t.c

D M Armstrong, A Materialist Theory of the Mind (London, 1968).

—— A World of States of Affairs (Cambridge, 1997).

Arnauld, Antoine(1612–94) A brilliant philosophical

con-troversialist, Arnauld exerted a powerful influence on the

development of seventeenth-century thought When

still under 30 he composed a devastating critique of

Descartes’s arguments for the distinctness of mind and

body, casting doubt on the logical completeness and

adequacy of the Cartesian conception of a pure thinking

substance (Fourth Set of Objections to the Meditations,

1641) A defender, despite his criticisms, of many aspects

of the Cartesian system, he went on to write, with Pierre

Nicole, the celebrated La Logique, ou L’Art de penser—the

so-called Port-Royal Logic—in 1662 In his early seventies,

Arnauld published a detailed refutation of Nicolas

Male-branche’s theory of perception in the Traité des vraies et

fausses idées (1683) A few years later, in a famous exchange

of letters with Leibniz, he argued that the Leibnizian

the-ory of individual substance eradicates genuine

contin-gency and leads to universal fatalism j.cot

*Cartesianism; mind–body problem; Port-Royalists

S M Nadler, Arnauld and the Cartesian Philosophy of Ideas

(Man-chester, 1989)

R C Sleigh, The Leibniz–Arnauld Correspondence (New Haven,

Conn., 1990)

Arrow, Kenneth Joseph (1921– ) Leading theorist of

social choice, winner of a Nobel Prize in 1972 In Social

Choice and Individual Values (1951), Arrow studied the

determination of rational choice at the collective level for

cases where this choice is to be a function of the

prefer-ences of the individuals making up the collective In this

study he proved the general impossibility theorem, which

gives rise to *Arrow’s paradox Assuming that any

accept-able function must meet a small number of intuitive

con-ditions, Arrow proved that there is no consistent function

from individual preferences to collective choice With

Debreu, Arrow also made a major contribution to general

equilibrium theory (In an economy in competitive

equi-librium all markets clear simultaneously: there is a balance

of supply and demand in all markets.) t.p

C C von Weizsacker, ‘Kenneth Arrow’s Contributions to

Eco-nomics’, Scandinavian Journal of Economics (1972).

Arrow’s paradox.A paradox in social choice theory Why

not devise a function which orders options for a society in

terms of the preferences of its individual members? Such a

function would have to meet certain conditions on

rea-sonableness—such as that (a) an ordering could be

obtained from any logically possible set of individuals’

preferences, (b) if everyone prefers a given A to a B, then

that A should be ordered above that B, (c) no individual can

dictate the social ordering—there can be no individual

such that whenever he prefers an A to a B, then that A must

be ordered above that B, and (d) the ordering of any A and

B depends on individuals’ preferences between that A and that B alone *Arrow proved that there was no consistent

function which met all the conditions t.p

*voting paradox

K J Arrow, Social Choice and Individual Values (New Haven,

Conn., 1951)

art.The idea that various activities such as painting, sculp-ture, architecsculp-ture, music, and poetry have something essential in common belongs to a particular period begin-ning only in the eighteenth century It was then that the

‘fine arts’ became separated off from scientific disciplines and more mundane exercises of skill Later, during the eras of romanticism and modernism, this became

trans-muted into the single notion of art Contemporary

philosophers have inherited the notion, but are no longer entirely sure what to do with it

One problem is the difficulty of defining art Consider what is usually treated as the earliest definition: art as mimesis, or the reproduction of the world in images For a long time painting and literature could be united under this heading (and a precedent cited in Greek thought) How-ever, if art is to include music and architecture, as well as the non-figurative visual forms of the twentieth century, this definition will not easily suffice Two notable defin-itions from the early part of this century built on the rejec-tion of representarejec-tion as a defining feature of art: art as significant form, and art as the expression of emotion Both play down the artwork’s relation to reality, in favour of perceptible aesthetic qualities of the art object itself, or of the relation between the work and the creative mind in which it originated Earlier intimations of both can be found in the ideas of *beauty and *genius in Kant’s theory

of art Both object-centred and artist-centred definitions of art could be used to discriminate that which was ‘properly’ art from that which was not, and such ideas helped in their day to explain the value of many progressive forms of art But each is at best one-sided as a comprehensive definition Successive waves of the avant-garde, together with increasing knowledge of different cultures, have shown how society’s institutions accommodate radical change in what is recognized as art It has even been suggested that the very point of the concept of art lies in its open-ended capacity to accept change Some have offered what is called an institutional definition of art, prompted by the thought that the only common feature among artworks is just their being recognized as art by certain institutions in particular societies It would presumably be left to history

to show what these institutions were, and the various functions or values which the things called art have had within them While there must remain appropriate stand-ards by which one work can be judged superior to another, it would be hard to deny that the inclusion and exclusion of different activities from the status of art has served other functions in society, such as fostering élitism

or class-distinction

art 59

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