Aristotle and his
predecessors on heat, pneuma and soul
Conference
Prague, June 12–14, 2014
Charles University
Aristotle's hylomorphic theory of living things and its attending assumptions have been much debated in recent decades. It is generally recognized that Aristotle’s psychology is the source for his unified theory of living beings and their life processes. His psychology is thus based also on certain »physiological« assumptions. The sources and contexts for the physiological aspects of Aristotle’s psychology are manifold, but seldom the object of philosophical reflection. In this conference, we propose to focus upon two particular, and particularly difficult, physiological components of Aristotle’s psychology: the concepts of innate heat and connate pneuma. The purpose of the conference is to further study these concepts, both within the larger history of the metaphysics of the body, and in history of ancient medical theory of life and the soul.
Hynek Bartoš (Charles University, Prague) and Colin Guthrie King (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin): Introduction
Gábor Betegh (Central European University, Budapest): Fire, heat and motive force in early Greek philosophy and medicine
Shaul Tor (King's College London): Parmenides: hot metempsychosis and the physiology of divinisation
Simon Trépanier (University of Edinburgh): Empedocles on fire and the transmigrating soul
Antonia Kakavelaki (University of Athens): Diogenes of Apollonia, Hippocratic thought, and Aristotelian pneuma
Richard King (Universität Bern): The Hippocratic On Nutrition
James Lennox (University of Pittsburgh): Why animals must keep their cool: Aristotle on the need for respiration (and other forms of cooling)
Tiberiu Popa (Butler University): Aristotle on the powers of thermic equilibrium
Jessica Gelber (Syracuse University): Heat and cold as nature’s tools
Patricio Fernandez/Jorge Mittelmann (Universidad de los Andes, Chile): ἡ κίνησις τῆς τέχνης: Crafts and souls as principles of change
Klaus Corcilius (University of Berkeley): Basic animal action and internal heat
Malcolm Wilson (University of Oregon): The mediating role of the Meteorologica between celestial and terrestrial life
Karel Thein (Charles University, Prague): On the “nature” in connate pneuma and the first body (GA 2.3, 736b29- 737a7)
Robert Roreitner (Charles University, Prague): Perceptual pneuma in Aristotle: What happens between the individual senses and the central organ?
Patrick J. Macfarlane (Providence College): The Pathological Role of Pneuma in Aristotle
Pavel Gregorić (University of Zagreb): The pneumatic theory of De spiritu
Orly Lewis (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin): Heat in De spiritu: Embryology and physiology
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