References
- ‘eidos’ To complicate things further, Aristotle uses the word for the first kind (8b26) and the word ‘genos’ for the other three (9al4, 9a28, 10all).
- I am supposing that, in the light of, e.g., 2b37ff, we can understand ‘x is more substance than y’ to mean something like ‘x is more strictly called “substance” than y.’
- 1882–1909 . Commentaria in Aristotelem Graeca Textual citations of the commentators are from these volumes of the (Berlin: Ammonius [1] IV, 4; Dexippus [1] IV, 2; Elias [1] XVIII, 1; Philoponus [1] XIII, 1; Simplicius [1] VIII.
- Categories It should be noted, however, that Simplicius, who is also thought to have heard Ammonius's lectures on the repeats the line about Aristotle's not saying ‘in which it was’ but ‘in which it is.’ But he then goes on to draw a Dexippus-type moral (49, 14–18).
- 1968 . Review of Metaphysics , 21 : 630 – 55 . Indeed, if we are to suppose that Aristotle countenanced them, we had better give them an independent motivation. Marc Cohen and I tried to do that in our paper, The One and the Many,'