Aristotle's Physics
278 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:01 Mar 1995
ISBN:9780813521923
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Aristotle's Physics

A Guided Study

By Joe Sachs and Aristotle; Translated by Joe Sachs
Rutgers University Press

This is a new translation, with introduction, commentary, and an explanatory glossary.

"Sachs's translation and commentary rescue Aristotle's text from the rigid, pedantic, and misleading versions that have until now obscured his thought. Thanks to Sachs's superb guidance, the Physics comes alive as a profound dialectical inquiry whose insights into the enduring questions about nature, cause, change, time, and the 'infinite' are still pertinent today. Using such guided studies in class has been exhilarating both for myself and my students."  ––Leon R. Kass, The Committee on Social Thought, University of Chicago 

Aristotle’s Physics is the only complete and coherent  book we have from the ancient world in which a thinker of the first rank seeks to say something about nature as a whole. For centuries, Aristotle’s inquiry into the causes and conditions of motion and rest dominated science and philosophy. To understand the intellectual assumptions of a powerful world view—and the roots of the Scientific Revolution—reading Aristotle is critical. Yet existing translations of Aristotle’s Physics have made it difficult to understand either Aristotle’s originality or the lasting value of his work.

In this volume in the Masterworks of Discovery series, Joe Sachs provides a new plain-spoken English translation of all of Aristotle’s classic treatise and accompanies it with a long interpretive introduction, a running explication of the text, and a helpful glossary. He succeeds brilliantly in fulfilling the aim of this innovative series: to give the general reader the tools to read and understand a masterwork of scientific discovery. 

Sachs's translation and commentary rescue Aristotle's text from the rigid, pedantic, and misleading versions that have until now obscured his thought. Thanks to Sachs's superb guidance, the Physics comes alive as a profound dialectical inquiry whose insights into the enduring questions about nature, cause, change, time, and the 'infinite' are still pertinent today. Using such guided studies in class has been exhilarating both for myself and my students. Leon R. Kass, The Committee on Social Thought, University of Chicago
Joe Sachs has taught for twenty years at St. John's College, Annapolis, Maryland, where from 1990 to 1992 he held the NEH Chair in Ancient Thought.
Series Editor's Preface
Introduction
Note on Aristotle's Central Vocabulary
Book I Beginnings
Book II, Chapter 1-3 Causes
Chapters 4-9 Chance and Necessity
Book III, Chapters 1-3 Motion
Chapters 4-8 The Infinite
Book IV, Chapters 1-5 Place
Chapters 6-9 The Void
Chapters 10-14 Time
Book V Motions as Wholes
Book VI Internal Structure of Motions
Book VII Relation of Mover and Moved
Book VIII, Chapters 1-6 Deduction of Motionless First Mover
Chapters 7-10 The First Motion
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