Rescuing Aristotle

An excellent article! I think the tendency to judge historical figures by modern standards is one we always have to be cautious of. Aristotle was amazing for his times. Criticizing him for not understanding the world as well as we do, without understanding the intervening 2300 years, is facile.

Criticizing Aristotle is a tradition that probably has roots in the struggle of early modern scientists against many medieval scholars who turned him into a source of dogma, but that wasn’t Aristotle’s fault. It would be similar to scholars 1000 years from now deciding that Stephen Hawking was a source of dogma.

3 thoughts on “Rescuing Aristotle

  1. I think Aristotle was amazing, period, ESPECIALLY by today’s standards. We all make mistakes, but his were within the context of a soaring mountain of achievement that very few since have even thought of attempting. And consider that we may only have his class lecture notes (not his published work). It takes a lot of chutzpah to call him intellectually slovenly!

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    1. Agreed. It’s very easy to criticize historical figures for not knowing what we know today, or for having views uninformed with the history between us and them. It’s almost always a demonstration of grandstanding rather than one of any real insight.

      I have to admit that I didn’t even know that we only had his lecture notes. It’s amazing to ponder we we don’t have from the ancient world, what didn’t make it through the centuries. Lucretius’s “On the Nature of Things” might have been down to one existing copy when it was discovered in the archives of a German monastery.

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