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    Aristotle himself acknowledges counterexamples to the cha... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Either Aristotle is not correctly interpreted as arguing for teleology from the ground up in Physics ii 8, or he changed his mind about the grounds of teleology

    Aristotle himself acknowledges counterexamples to the chance-vs-teleology disjunction

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    CausationTruth & Knowledge

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    knowledge(Distinguished from mere true belief, which may be the product of indoctrination and need not exercise deliberative capacities.)
    Justified true belief — true belief that has been arrived at through the exercise of deliberative capacities, including comparison of and deliberation among alternatives.

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    Ascribing a straight contradiction to Aristotle should be avoided if possibleEither Aristotle is not correctly interpreted as arguing for teleology from the ...The counterexamples undermine the argument as traditionally interpreted

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    A false disjunction cannot ground a valid argument for teleology76%Aristotle's argument assumes an exhaustive and exclusive disjunction b...74%In Physics ii 8, Aristotle is not arguing for teleology from the groun...73%Given the chance of A under the best systems theory, one can deduce th...73%

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    If so much captures Aristotle’s dominant argument for teleology, then his view is unmotivated. The argument is problematic in the first instance because it assumes an exhaustive and exclusive disjunction between what is by chance and what is for the sake of something. But there are obviously other possibilities. Hearts beat not in order to make noise, but they do so always and not by chance. Second, and this is perplexing if we have represented him correctly, Aristotle is himself aware of one s

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