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Chapter 12 - The Agency of the World

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 May 2021

Ricardo Salles
Affiliation:
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
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Summary

The chapter explores how the Stoics account for the totality of movement in the cosmos – in other words, the agency of the world. The Stoics take the world to be a complex and divine living-being. Their physics combines what today we might call physics, biology and theology. The Stoics put forward two premises that appear to be in tension. First, they claim that the active principle is the sole source of movement and cause of everything. Second, they offer a scala naturae according to which kinds of entities differ by the way in which they move and jointly co-cause all movement in the world. This One-Many Problem is the Stoic version of what is later called the problem of free will and determinism, or so I argue. As the Stoics conceive of the problem, the challenge consists in showing how both premises – One Cause and Many Causes – are true. The Stoic approach strikes me as attractive, both because it looks at humans together with animals and other parts of the world and because of its upshot for human agency. Our reasoning, including our decision-making, constitutes some of the causes that co-cause the world’s overall movements. What remains puzzling, however, is that our reasoning is subject to norms. Ultimately, I argue, the puzzle is how norms for practical reasoning fit into the physical world. This reconstruction does justice to the evidence. It recognizes that the Stoics address human movement in the context of a scala naturae. And it predicts what indeed we find: a wide range of texts about the status of human assent, indicative of the awareness that this is not an easy topic.

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Cosmology and Biology in Ancient Philosophy
From Thales to Avicenna
, pp. 208 - 223
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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