Arystoteles na nowo odczytany. Ryszarda Kilvingtona „Kwestie o ruchu”
Streszczenie
The impulse to this book was a question that I was asked after my talk on
God and science in the Middle Ages, whether I was able to give a positive
answer to the problem, which I had signalled in my previous book Między
filozofią przyrody a nowożytnym przyrodoznastwem. Ryszard Kilvington i fizyka
matematyczna w średniowieczu, namely that I did not know what medieval
science had been and what respect it had to the modern science. I have decided
that the best way to answer that question is to show the readers on the
example of one of the medieval texts dealing with physics and, more specifically,
one of the fourteenth century commentaries to Aristotle’s Physics. My
choice, with regard to my long standing interest in Richard Kilvington, was
obvious. I decided to present a Polish translation of his Question on motion
along with a monograph. The main purpose of this study is to verify, through
detailed analyses, the commonly accepted view about the revolutionary
character of the new theory of motion invented and developed by the members
of the so-called school of Oxford Calculators, which was founded by
Richard Kilvington and Thomas Bradwardine.
The book consists of two parts. The first one presents results of research
concerning Richard Kilvington’s biography and dating of his works, a description
of his four questions on motion, methods he used in philosophy of
nature, and his theories set against the background of two famous fourteenth
century thinkers: William of Ockham and Thomas Bradwardine. The second
part presents a Polish translation of Kilvington’s four questions – a result of
his lectures on Aristotle’s Physics. These questions are: 1) Whether an active
potency exceeds a passive potency of a body in motion; 2) Whether a quality takes
degrees of more and less; 3) Whether a simple body can move equally fast in a plenum
and a vacuum; 4) Whether that which has changed in the moment when it has first
changed, is in that to which it has changed.
Richard Kilvington was born in the beginning of the fourteenth century in
the village of Kilvington in Yorkshire. He studied at Oxford, where he became
Master of Arts (1324/1325) and then Doctor of Theology (ca. 1335). His
academic career was followed by a diplomatic and ecclesiastical one. It culminated
in his service as Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. Along with
Richard Fitzralph, Kilvington was involved in the battle against mendicant
friars almost until his death in 1361. Except for a few sermons, all of Kilvington’s known works stem from his lectures at Oxford. His philosophical
works, the Sophismata and Quaestiones super De generatione et corruptione, both
composed before 1325, were the result of lectures given as a Bachelor of Arts;
his Quaestiones super Physicam (Questions on motion) composed in 1325/26 and
Quaestiones super Libros Ethicorum composed in 1326/1332 come from the period
he was a Master of Arts; finally, he composed eight questions on Peter
Lombard’s Sentences at the Faculty of Theology before 1335.
One of the most notable achievements of Kilvington’s theory is his awareness
of the different levels of abstraction involved in the problem he analyzes.
Although his account frequently proceeds secundum imaginationem in the direction
of “speculative physics”, it never renounces empirical verification.
Nevertheless, Kilvington ponders questions, which would never arise as
a result of direct observation, since the structure of nature can only be uncovered
by highly abstract analyses. Such abstractions, however, arise from
genuine realities and cannot contradict them. He sees physics and mathematics
as complementary, i.e., as two different ways of describing natural phenomena.
Reality provides the starting point for the more complicated mental
constructions, which in turn make it comprehensible. While mathematics is
the proper way to solve the problems, logic remains the most convenient way
to pose them. These different methods together guarantee the objective and
demonstrative character of the natural sciences. On the one hand, Kilvington
never abandons the realm of Aristotelian physics or rejects the principles laid
down in his natural philosophy. But on the other, his tendency to combine
mathematics and physics frequently led him beyond Aristotle’s theories to
seek solutions to many paradoxes which resulted from Aristotelian principles.
Kilvington pointed to two different conditions which have to be met:
one referring to the everyday use of language, which describes real, physical
phenomena; and another referring to the formal, i.e. logico-mathematical,
language that deals with the questions in the realm of speculative, i.e.,
mathematical, physics.
Like a great many Oxford thinkers of the period, Kilvington is convinced
that mathematics is useful in any branch of scientific inquiry that deals with
measurable subjects. He makes a broad use of the most popular fourteenthcentury
calculative techniques to solve not only physical but also ethical and
theological problems. Three types of calculations can be found in Kilvington’s
Quaestions on motion. The most predominant is the measure by limits,
i.e., by the first and last instants beginning and ending a continuous process,
and by the intrinsic and extrinsic limits of capacities of passive and active
potencies. The second type of calculation, by a latitude of forms, covers
processes in which accidental forms or qualities are intensified or diminished,
e.g., in the distribution of such natural qualities as heat or whiteness.
Finally, the third type of calculation is more properly mathematical and
employs a new calculus of compounding ratios in order to measure the
speed of local motion.
Although Kilvington subscribes to the general Aristotelian principles of
motion, he follows Ockham in accepting substance and quality as the only
two kinds of really existing things. Beyond doubt, Kilvington follows Ockham’s
understanding of the works of the Philosopher. He explains the reality
of motion in terms of the mobile subject and places, qualities, and quantities it
acquires successively. Consequently, Kilvington is mostly interested in
measuring local motion in terms of its actions or causes, the distance traversed
and time consumed, rather than in the “intensity” of its speed. It is his
analysis of local motion that places Kilvington among the 14th-century pioneers
who considered the problem of motion with respect to its cause (tamquam
penes causam), corresponding to modern dynamics, and with respect to
its effect (tamquam penes effectum), corresponding to modern kinematics.
In his first question, Kilvington, while debating the problem of setting
boundaries to capacities or potencies involved in active/passive processes,
presents many theories of his colleagues, as well as the Aristotelian and
Averroenian solutions of the problem. He articulates most of the issues,
which were at stake, and poses questions that influenced the solutions of later
Calculators. Kilvington’s most interesting and original idea in the theory of
motion concerns the new rule of motion, which relates forces, resistance and
speeds in motion and shows that the proper way of measuring the speed of
motion is to describe its variations by the double ratio of motive force (F) and
resistance (R). In order to produce a mathematically coherent theory, he insists
(in agreement with Euclid’s definition from the fifth book of the Elements)
that a proper double proportion is the multiplication of a proportion
by itself. Kilvington’s function makes it possible to avoid a serious weakness
of Aristotle’s theory, which cannot explain the mathematical relationship of
F and R in a motion with a speed of less than 1. Local motion considered in its
dynamic aspect, i.e., when speed is proportional to the ratios of Fs to Rs, describes
the changes of speed, i.e., the accelerate motion. Local motion considered
in its kinematic aspect describes the changes of speed with regard to time and traversed distance, and it describes both uniform and uniformly
difform motion. Like William of Ockham, Kilvington is convinced that a motion
is nothing else than an individual thing in motion. Therefore, speed has
to be measured by distances, i.e., latitude of a quality (formal distance) or
quantity traversed, and such traversals take time unless the speed is infinitely
great. In his questions he considers all sorts of motion, which can occur both
in a medium and in a void. Although he holds that the vacuum does not exist
in nature, he is nevertheless convinced, contrary to Aristotle, that neither
logic nor nature exclude a possible existence of a vacuum. Moreover, using
a new rule of motion it is possible to show that a motion in a vacuum would
be temporal for both mixed and simple bodies.
Ockham’s influence is also confirmed in Kilvington’s considerations of
qualitative changes, which was also one of the most frequently discussed
issues in the 14th century. Kilvington is convinced that two main Ockhamist
principles, namely particularist ontology and economy of thinking, suffice to
explain all qualitative changes, such becoming white or cold. Since a quality
is a real thing, it is enough to conclude that in the process of becoming hot
a body possesses the same quality, which changes from one extreme, i.e.,
coldness to the other, i.e., hotness. Such terms as the “latitude of a form”,
“degree of coldness” etc. are nothing else but sincategorematic terms, which
we use to describe qualitative changes. In reality, there are only substances
and qualities, the only existing permanent things, while the remaining eight
Aristotelian categories serve only to describe various aspects of an individual
thing in the outside reality.
Kilvington’s teaching on natural philosophy was influential both in England
and on the Continent. His Quaestiones de motu were well known to the
next generation of the Oxford Calculators and influenced also such prominent
Parisian masters as Nicole Oresme and John Buridan. It was Thomas
Bradwardine, however, who was the most renowned beneficiary of Kilvington’s
work, so much that until recently he was called the Founder of the Oxford
Calculators’ School,. The analysis of dispersal of new ideas of mathematical
physics point strongly at Kilvington as their primary source. In his
famous Treatise on proportions in motion (the best know medieval treatise presenting
a new rule of motion) Bradwardine incorporated almost one half of
Kilvington’s first and third questions on motion. Extolling of Bradwardine’s
treatise by his followers and modern historians of medieval science and swift
oblivion of Kilvington’s work were caused by the fact that Bradwardine treatise was a manual for students following the rules for this type of work, i.e.,
dividing material in chapters, which present general rules based on a theory
of proportion, while Kilvington’s questions are the result of his lecturing; one
can easily notice that some parts of them are students’ reportata, so their text is
difficult in reading.
In the present book I reiterate the opinion expressed in my previous book
that medieval science was a specific phenomenon of the medieval culture. It
can hardly be compared with modern science and its views of the world are
clearly incompatible with the modern ones. In its history, medieval science
took the Aristotelian course, thoroughly explored that framework exposing
its paradoxes and weakness and reached the point, where it was no longer
able to overcome the lingering doubt. Its story is finished, so each historian of
science is free to write his or her own tale about it. In my opinion, Richard
Kilvington, even though he abandoned Aristotle’s prohibition of metabasis,
which does not allow to use mathematics as a proper language for physics,
and invented a few new methods, still strove to overcome the difficulties and
the numerous aporiae of Aristotelian physics, showing how we should properly
understand the Philosopher.
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