The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle

The idea that the concept of 'violence' was part and is still viewed as part of a broad philosophical category may seem strange. However, the problem is resolved by referring to the concept of 'force,' which is lost in modern philosophy. The exception was the works in which we fi...

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Main Authors: Borisov Sergei, Rimsky Viktor, Ivashina Roman, Lyashenko Igor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:SHS Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.shs-conferences.org/articles/shsconf/pdf/2019/13/shsconf_appsconf2019_01024.pdf
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spelling doaj-b9ebff815ccb4d3ca8c73bfc7ecd53ed2021-03-02T09:31:35ZengEDP SciencesSHS Web of Conferences2261-24242019-01-01720102410.1051/shsconf/20197201024shsconf_appsconf2019_01024The concept of violence in the philosophy of AristotleBorisov SergeiRimsky ViktorIvashina RomanLyashenko IgorThe idea that the concept of 'violence' was part and is still viewed as part of a broad philosophical category may seem strange. However, the problem is resolved by referring to the concept of 'force,' which is lost in modern philosophy. The exception was the works in which we find some “traces” of this concept, including the works of Aristotle, which need to be free from modernizing interpretations. Still, in the translations of Aristotle, the Greek word δύναμις, used in its traditional meaning of potentiality, lost its connotations of force (movement, capability, function); in turn, 'force' was no longer linked with 'violence' (βια) and 'necessity.' Violence is seen as a kind of necessity, which is associated with the suppression of 'will,' freedom, something 'frustrating desire' and contrary to 'common sense,' as well as the absence of 'good.' Violence is presented not only in an ontological sense, but also existentially, as the opposite of 'good' and one's own 'desire.' Force stays in the background of 'necessity' as 'potentiality', 'potential energy' and 'movement', and violence loses the opposition that has arisen in the ontological mode.https://www.shs-conferences.org/articles/shsconf/pdf/2019/13/shsconf_appsconf2019_01024.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Borisov Sergei
Rimsky Viktor
Ivashina Roman
Lyashenko Igor
spellingShingle Borisov Sergei
Rimsky Viktor
Ivashina Roman
Lyashenko Igor
The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle
SHS Web of Conferences
author_facet Borisov Sergei
Rimsky Viktor
Ivashina Roman
Lyashenko Igor
author_sort Borisov Sergei
title The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle
title_short The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle
title_full The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle
title_fullStr The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle
title_full_unstemmed The concept of violence in the philosophy of Aristotle
title_sort concept of violence in the philosophy of aristotle
publisher EDP Sciences
series SHS Web of Conferences
issn 2261-2424
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The idea that the concept of 'violence' was part and is still viewed as part of a broad philosophical category may seem strange. However, the problem is resolved by referring to the concept of 'force,' which is lost in modern philosophy. The exception was the works in which we find some “traces” of this concept, including the works of Aristotle, which need to be free from modernizing interpretations. Still, in the translations of Aristotle, the Greek word δύναμις, used in its traditional meaning of potentiality, lost its connotations of force (movement, capability, function); in turn, 'force' was no longer linked with 'violence' (βια) and 'necessity.' Violence is seen as a kind of necessity, which is associated with the suppression of 'will,' freedom, something 'frustrating desire' and contrary to 'common sense,' as well as the absence of 'good.' Violence is presented not only in an ontological sense, but also existentially, as the opposite of 'good' and one's own 'desire.' Force stays in the background of 'necessity' as 'potentiality', 'potential energy' and 'movement', and violence loses the opposition that has arisen in the ontological mode.
url https://www.shs-conferences.org/articles/shsconf/pdf/2019/13/shsconf_appsconf2019_01024.pdf
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