gmgauthier.com/content/podcast/Aristotle-101-The-Four-Causes.md
2022-01-05 13:07:38 +00:00

1.4 KiB
Raw Blame History

title date series image enclosure draft
The Four Causes 2020-02-27T23:20:28Z Aristotle 101 img/1295493-1582845588348-450f41e79954b.jpg audio/podcast_2020-02-27_8cec687245f86d0ab10bbe975c356f09.m4a false

{{< audio "https://gmgauthier.us-east-1.linodeobjects.com/podcast/audio/podcast_2020-02-27_8cec687245f86d0ab10bbe975c356f09.m4a" >}}

Transcript can be {{< newtab url="post/aristotle-101-the-four-causes/" title="found here." >}}

In the Physics, Aristotle says that we aim at understanding, which he says is to be able to give a full account of “the how and the why of things coming into existence and going out of it”. In other words, to understand something is to be able to give an explanation of how and why a thing changes. That explanation is what Aristotle means by cause. Today, thinking of explanation in terms of causes is not an alien notion. But, when we do this, we are typically only thinking in one narrow scientific sense of the term. Aristotle, however, describes a theory of causal explanation in both the Physics and the Metaphysics that includes four separate categorical senses of the term. Aristotle insists that a complete explanation will appeal to all four of these kinds of cause. In this answer, I will briefly describe the four causes, and attempt to explain why the fourth, final cause is primary in Aristotles theory.