Ugolino's eternal punishment represents immutability: he remains locked in an unchanging loop of biting the archbishop's head instead of facing his own responsibility.
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Immutability
Jiang says Plato believes in immutability and eternity, while Aristotle treats almost everything except God as mutable and describes reality as infinity or continuous change.
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Key Notes
Jiang says Plato believes in immutability and eternity, while Aristotle treats almost everything except God as mutable and describes reality as infinity or continuous change.
Timestamped Evidence
"...in a frozen lake to represent all eternity to represent um immutability the incapacity to change and this is happening over and over where..."
"an analogy to achilles mutually in the body of hector right remember in the um iliad achilles kills hector in a battle and at..."
"...The third major difference is Plato believes in the idea of immutability. Okay? Or what we call eternity. For Aristotle, almost nothing is immutable...."
"Things will always change. Things will always move. There's no stopping movement. Okay? But for Plato, things are eternal. There's a grand design, and..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Aristotle is not treated here as the solitary genius behind Western reason.
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