The Activity of Being: An Essay on Aristotles Ontology
English
By (author): Aryeh Kosman
Understanding what something is is a project that has long occupied philosophers. Perhaps no thinker in the Western tradition has had more influence on how we approach this question than Aristotle, whose Metaphysics remains the locus classicus of rigorous examinations into the nature of being. Now, in an elegantly argued new study, Aryeh Kosman reinterprets Aristotles ontology and compels us to reexamine some of our most basic assumptions about the great philosophers thought.
For Aristotle, to ask what something is is to inquire into a specific mode of its being, something ordinarily regarded as its substance. But to understand substance, we need the concept of energeiaa Greek term usually translated as actuality. In a move of far-reaching consequence, Kosman explains that the correct translation of energeia is not actuality but activity. We have subtly misunderstood the Metaphysics on this crucial point, says Kosman. Aristotle conceives of substance as a kind of dynamic activity, not some inert quality. Substance is something actively being what it is.
Kosman demonstrates how this insight significantly alters our understanding of a number of important concepts in Aristotelian thought, from accounts of motion, consciousness, and essence to explanations of the nature of animal and divine being. Whether it is approached as an in-depth introduction to Aristotles metaphysics or as a highly original reassessment sure to spark debate, there can be no argument that The Activity of Being is a major contribution to our understanding of one of philosophys most important thinkers.