Greek 's great thoughtist Aristotle was born in 384 BC. Stagilus, the city of ancient Macedonia in northern Greece. At the age of 18, Aristotle went to Athens and began studying at Plato University. He stayed at university for 19 years and became a teacher and independent researcher. After Plato died in 347 BC, Aristotle spent 12 years traveling and living in various places around the Aegean Sea for 12 years. It was during this time that Philippe of Macedonia asked Aristotle to be a personal tutor of his son Aleksandr.
That year, Galileo received education on Aristotle's physics at college. Galileo began to question Aristotle's physics approach. Basically he argued against Aristotle's theory and insisted that all objects fell at the same speed in vacuum regardless of their weight. He wrote his findings in his book "De motu". That means On Motion. When Galileo was 65 years old, he made his most famous invention - a telescope. It is the central tool of the so-called 17th century scientific revolution. It appeared in the Netherlands, but it was Galileo who made this instrument famous. In six months, Galileo made a 32x telescope. It can also be adjusted as a microscope. He set it for heaven and began the age of telescope astronomy.
In the sixth century Europe, byzantine scholar John Philoponas questioned Aristotle's physics education and pointed out its flaws. He introduced the theory of propulsion. Prior to the appearance of John Philoponus, Aristotle's physics was not scrutinized, unlike Aristotle, his physics was established on the basis of oral discussion, and Philoponus relied on observation. Regarding Aristotle's physics, John Philoponus wrote as follows. "But this is totally wrong, our view can be more effectively confirmed by actual observations.You will notice that the proportion of time needed for exercise is not dependent on the weight ratio, The difference is very small over time.
These words are that Aristotle is not Zeno In fact, this argument is not attributed to Xeno of Aristotle. However, there is a view of Simplicius ((a) Aristotle's Physics, 139.24) derived from Zeno. That is why it is included here. Aristotle initially assumed that the body is "perfectly" separable "; the second phase of the discussion explicitly states that it can be divided into parts. Part size is not completely divided yet. (The important thing is that the body is actually composed of these parts. Remember from the previous part by dividing all parts into two and getting these parts. Dimensional part These parts may not do anything at all, as Zeno said, or even if it is "part of a point" or if there is nothing in that part, the body is the same.