Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Aristotle's Induction and the Inference of First Principles
View through CrossRef
Aristotle's Induction and the Inference of First Principlesobserves that Aristotle’s reputation as an empiricist has come under threat. In thePosterior Analytics, Aristotle puts forward a foundationalist theory of scientific knowledge that problematizes knowing the science's first principles empirically. Aristotle states that we know the principles through induction but also that induction is inadequate for knowing essences. In response to this tension, rationalists claim that Aristotle equivocates between two conceptions of induction, enumerative and intuitive:"intuitive induction" being that which grasps the principles and provides direct knowledge of essences, “enumerative induction” being that which is said to be inadequate. Empiricists preserve an empiricist road to first principles by downplaying enumerative induction’s role.
In order to preserve Aristotle's avowals that it is by induction that we know the principles while avoiding the rationalist alternative, David Botting provides an inferentialist account of induction, showing how the content of a first principle is inferentially known but not its necessity, which must be proved by constructing the first principle from simpler elements. A world governed by natural necessities and not just brute regularities is knowable through the senses and without resorting to super-empirical acts or faculties of intuition.
Title: Aristotle's Induction and the Inference of First Principles
Description:
Aristotle's Induction and the Inference of First Principlesobserves that Aristotle’s reputation as an empiricist has come under threat.
In thePosterior Analytics, Aristotle puts forward a foundationalist theory of scientific knowledge that problematizes knowing the science's first principles empirically.
Aristotle states that we know the principles through induction but also that induction is inadequate for knowing essences.
In response to this tension, rationalists claim that Aristotle equivocates between two conceptions of induction, enumerative and intuitive:"intuitive induction" being that which grasps the principles and provides direct knowledge of essences, “enumerative induction” being that which is said to be inadequate.
Empiricists preserve an empiricist road to first principles by downplaying enumerative induction’s role.
In order to preserve Aristotle's avowals that it is by induction that we know the principles while avoiding the rationalist alternative, David Botting provides an inferentialist account of induction, showing how the content of a first principle is inferentially known but not its necessity, which must be proved by constructing the first principle from simpler elements.
A world governed by natural necessities and not just brute regularities is knowable through the senses and without resorting to super-empirical acts or faculties of intuition.
Related Results
Function Argument in Aristotle's Ethics
Function Argument in Aristotle's Ethics
Jakub Jirsa provides the first book-length study of the “function argument”, outlining its central importance for Aristotle’s ethics and his understanding of happiness and living w...
Aristotle's Gynecology
Aristotle's Gynecology
Abstract
This book discusses Aristotle’s methods for the establishment of gynecological facts within his natural science. It argues that many of the gynecological ph...
5. Aristotle
5. Aristotle
This chapter examines the argument of Aristotle's Politics in relation to the theory of justice that he articulates in his Nicomachean Ethics. It first provides a biography of Aris...
Economics and the Public Good
Economics and the Public Good
What is the nature of economics? How does economics relate to politics? Readers searching for the Ancient Greeks’ answers to these questions often turn to Aristotle, focusing on sm...
The Attributed to Aristotle
The Attributed to Aristotle
The pseudo-Theology of Aristotle is the most important example of the exposure of the cultivated Arab readership to Neoplatonism in Aristotle’s garb. Plotinus’s doctrines are const...
Aristotle's Practical Epistemology
Aristotle's Practical Epistemology
AbstractAristotle’s Practical Epistemology presents a novel interpretation of Aristotle’s influential account of practical wisdom (phronēsis) by situating the topic within his broa...
Aristotle on Agency
Aristotle on Agency
This essay attempts to answer three questions about Aristotle’s account of agency: (1) What is an action? (2) Under what conditions is an action voluntary or intentional? (3) What ...
Does It Matter? Material Nature and Vital Heat in Aristotle’s Biology
Does It Matter? Material Nature and Vital Heat in Aristotle’s Biology
Adriel M. Trott’s “Does It Matter? Material Nature and Vital Heat in Aristotle’s Biology” questions whether the difference between form and material in Aristotle is itself a formal...

