All Topics  
Entelechy

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Entelechy



 
 
Entelechy (La.
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 entelechia, from Gk.
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
 , entelécheia) is a philosophical
Philosophy

Philosophy is the study of general problems concerning matters such as existence, knowledge, truth, beauty, justice, validity, mind, and language....
 concept of Aristotle
Aristotle

Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
 that was later adopted by the biological thinker Hans Driesch. From én (in), télos (end, or purpose) and échein (to have), Aristotle coined it to signify "having one's end within", therefore, that something's essential potential is being fully actualised.

ristotle's Metaphysics
Metaphysics (Aristotle)

Metaphysics is one of the principal works of Aristotle and the first major work of the Metaphysics with the same name. The principal subject is "being qua being", or being understood as being....
, the concept is contrasted with enérgeia
Energeia

Energeia is an important Greek language technical term in the works of Aristotle. The two components of his coinage indicate something being "in work"....
.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Entelechy'
Start a new discussion about 'Entelechy'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


Entelechy (La.
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 entelechia, from Gk.
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
 , entelécheia) is a philosophical
Philosophy

Philosophy is the study of general problems concerning matters such as existence, knowledge, truth, beauty, justice, validity, mind, and language....
 concept of Aristotle
Aristotle

Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
 that was later adopted by the biological thinker Hans Driesch. From én (in), télos (end, or purpose) and échein (to have), Aristotle coined it to signify "having one's end within", therefore, that something's essential potential is being fully actualised.

Classical Philosophy

In Aristotle's Metaphysics
Metaphysics (Aristotle)

Metaphysics is one of the principal works of Aristotle and the first major work of the Metaphysics with the same name. The principal subject is "being qua being", or being understood as being....
, the concept is contrasted with enérgeia
Energeia

Energeia is an important Greek language technical term in the works of Aristotle. The two components of his coinage indicate something being "in work"....
. Entelécheia
 has been seen as a fullness of actualization which requires an ongoing or standing investment of effort in order to persist, as opposed to the energeia which is the activity of actualization not necessarily completed. Often entelechy is associated with form
Four causes

There are four main causes of nature according to Aristotle. These are the material cause, the formal cause, the efficient cause, and the final cause....
, and potency is associated with material
Four causes

There are four main causes of nature according to Aristotle. These are the material cause, the formal cause, the efficient cause, and the final cause....
 which potentially has the form. First entelechy is being in full working order (for example, the soul is the first entelechy of the body), and second entelechy is being in action. Motion or change can lead to an entelechy but also themselves can be seen as entelechies. Entelechy has even been seen as in some way perpetually "becoming itself" yet never reaching the goal of that "becoming" (and were it to do so, the entelechy would, by definition, cease to exist).

Something, for example wood, which is itself already actual, complete, and formed in its entelechy as wood, may be potentially something else, for example buildable into a house, and the entelechy of that potential for being built is the building process, the wood's being built into a house. By extension the building process is an entelechy of the wood too, though not of the wood just as wood, but just insofar as it is buildable into a house. The motion or change or process of change is the entelechy of the potentiality as potentiality (when still a potentiality). Once the buildable house is finished, "the buildable is no longer buildable," says Aristotle, and with the cessation of that potentiality for being built comes the cessation of its entelechy, the building process. The house builders move on to the next construction site and the next batch of wood. Actual things in a sense are processes, so that entelechy and energeia (activeness), though contrastable, tend to extend to the same things. Some processes seem perpetual, and thus sometimes an entelechy seems a becoming which never reaches that becoming's final goal.

An individual's life can in many ways be regarded as beholden to various simultaneous and overlapping entelechies, for example, the life trajectories imposed by the biological limitations, our mortality, the norms and expectations of family and/or society, and the individual's ego-ideal. Externally imposed entelechies and fantasized but unrealized entelechies can both be sources of frustration.

Societies can also be said to embody entelechies in their cultures; religious views, collective senses of entitlement, "mission" or "mandate" and even in their very languages. Societies/cultures sensing that their entelechial trajectory is reaching its terminus (i.e., sensing they are in decline) or that this trajectory has been deflected from its "proper" path by illegitimate forces - either internal or external - may exhibit violently irrational or even self-destructive reactions.

Thomism

Medieval Christianity, in the philosophy of Thomas Aquinas
Thomas Aquinas

Saint Thomas Aquinas, Dominican Order was a priest of the Roman Catholic Church in the Dominican Order from Italy, and an immensely influential philosopher and theologian in the tradition of scholasticism, known as Doctor Angelicus and Doctor Communis....
, relied on Aristotle's entelechy, when it defined God as actus purus, pure act. This lead to conflict with the Eastern Orthodox, who believed in uncreated essences, while the Western Christians maintained that energies and essences were of the same substance and that they were always created.

Modern Philosophy

In German Idealism
German idealism

||-||-||-||}German idealism was a philosophy movement in Germany in the late eighteenth century and early nineteenth century centuries. It developed out of the work of Immanuel Kant in the 1780s and 1790s, and was closely linked both with romanticism and the revolutionary politics of the Enlightenment....
, entelechy may denote a force propelling one to self-fulfillment. The concept had occupied a central position in the metaphysics of Leibniz, and is closely related to his monadology
Monadology

The Monadology is one of Gottfried Leibniz?s best known works representing his later philosophy. It is a short text which sketches in some 90 paragraphs a metaphysics of simple substances, or Monad ....
 in the sense that each sentient entity contains its own entire universe within it. Entelechy is also referred to by Hegel in The Phenomenology of Mind.

In the biological vitalism
Vitalism

Vitalism, as defined by the Merriam-Webster dictionary, is#a doctrine that the functions of a living organism are due to a vital principle distinct from biochemical reactions...
 of Hans Driesch, living things develop by entelechy, a common purposive and organising field. Leading vitalists like Driesch argued that many of the basic problems of biology cannot be solved by a philosophy in which the organism is simply considered a machine.

Aspects and applications of the concept of entelechy have been explored by the American critic and philosopher Kenneth Burke
Kenneth Burke

Kenneth Duva Burke was a major United States literary theory and philosophy. Burke's primary interests were in rhetoric and aesthetics....
 (1897-1993) whose concept of the "terministic screen" illustrates his thought on the subject.

See also

  • potentiality and actuality
  • teleological
  • ontology
    Ontology

    Ontology in philosophy is the study of the nature of being, existence or reality in general, as well as of the basic category of being and their relations....
  • ousia
    Ousia

    Ousia is the Greek language noun formed on the feminine present participle of ; it is analogous to the English participle being, and the Greek ontic....
  • hypostasis
    Hypostasis

    Hypostasis may refer to:* Hypostatic abstraction* Hypostasis , personification of entities* Hypostasis , an Australian-based not-for-profit organization...
  • physics
    Physics

    Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
  • Funkentelechy
    Funkentelechy

    "Funkentelechy" is a song by the funk band Parliament . It was the fourth track on the group's 1977 in music album Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo Syndrome and was released as a two-part Single in 1978 in music....


Bibliography

  • Energeia And Entelecheia: "Act" in Aristotle by George Alfred Blair University of Ottawa Press ISBN-13: 978-0776603643
  • Greek Philosophical Terms: A Historical Lexicon by Francis Peters NYU Press ISBN-13: 978-0814765524
  • "Energeia and Entelecheia" in "", by Joe Sachs in the .
  • "" (requires DjVu), by philosopher C.S. Peirce
    Charles Peirce

    Charles Sanders Peirce was an American logician, mathematics, Philosophy, and science, born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Peirce was educated as a chemist and employed as a scientist for 30 years....
    , in the , Vol. III, Page 1946.


External links