Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

The second way, then, would require arguing for this, that, or the other material answer to this question -- including my neoclassical answer, according to which "being" is either concrete or abstract, and concrete being is "becoming" (or "concrescence"), while abstract being is the necessary conditions of the possibility of "becoming" (or "concrescence") -- the most abstract of which are, in the case of metaphysics in the strict sense, solely what I distinguish as "trascendentals," and, in the case of metaphysics in the broad sense, also what I mean by "existentials." 

Wiki Markup
An instructive example of proceeding in these two ways is offered in effect by lvor Leclerc in _Whitehead's_ _Metaphysics._ Leclerc argues that Whitehead entirely agrees with Aristotle in understanding metaphysics as the attempt to conceive "a complete fact," or "a complete existence." "By 'a complete fact' Whitehead means precisely what Aristotle meant by the _that_ which _i{_}{_}s_ in this sense.'" Thus, "\[ w \]hen Whitehead says the problem \[_sc._ of metaphysics \] is 'to conceive a complete fact' he means thereby what Aristotle meant in declaring the problem to be: 'what that is which _is_ in this sense \[_sc._ in the sense
of ouova
 of _ovoa_ \]'..." (17 f.). But, of course, as Leclerc goes on to show at great length in the rest of his book, Whitehead's _solution_ to the problem significantly differs from Aristotle's precisely because he takes "a complete fact," or a 'fully existent' entity," to be "an actual entity," as distinct from "a particular and actually existing thing," which is to say, an enduring individual that Aristotle takes _ouva_ properly to refer to. So whether Leclerc ever makes my distinction between "formal" and "material"
 -- and I have not confirmed that he does
 -- he certainly employs it, or something very like it, in arguing for his understanding of Whitehead's relation to "the great philosophical tradition."

1 September 2008; rev. 15 October 2009