Ancient Philosophy WIP series: Bridget Brasher

  • Starts: 4:00 pm on Tuesday, February 11, 2025
  • Ends: 6:00 pm on Tuesday, February 11, 2025
A series with work in progress lectures on topics in Ancient Philosophy. This week's topic: Bridget Brasher (MIT), Topic: What Aristotle thinks void is Abstract: Prior to arguing against the existence of void in Physics IV.6–9, Aristotle offers an answer to what void is: place deprived of body. His refutations then target two different sorts of void, separated and inseparable voids. It is unsolved in Aristotelian scholarship what these two sorts of void are. This paper offers an interpretation. I find that the distinction between voids is philosophically rich and bears explanatory potential in a way unrecognized by studies on ancient void theory. Indeed, if my interpretation is correct, the distinction may be prescient, anticipating Newton’s own distinction between relative and absolute inertial frames two millennia later.
Location:
STH 325, 745 Commonwealth Ave