Zeno's Paradoxes on Motion

Review of Metaphysics 16 (3):486 - 490 (1963)
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Abstract

The author argues that, Although zeno's paradoxes on motion cannot be resolved in their own terms, They are nonetheless illegitimate. Examining the paradox of achilles and the tortoise, He finds that the mechanism of zeno's argument consists in an equivocal concept of motion characterized at once by a constant rate and by proportionate segments of movement. He then contends it is illegitimate to treat the concept of motion and its subconcepts like the postulates of a deductive system. However, That the common theory of meaning presupposed by zeno's paradoxes is erroneous would have to be demonstrated metaphysically. (staff)

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