@article {Pettigrew:June 2009:0031-8868:239, author = "Pettigrew, Richard", title = "Aristotle on the Subject Matter of Geometry", journal = "Phronesis: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy", volume = "54", year = "June 2009", abstract = "I offer a new interpretation of Aristotle's philosophy of geometry, which he presents in greatest detail in Metaphysics M 3. On my interpretation, Aristotle holds that the points, lines, planes, and solids of geometry belong to the sensible realm, but not in a straightforward way. Rather, by considering Aristotle's second attempt to solve Zeno's Runner Paradox in Book VIII of the Physics, I explain how such objects exist in the sensibles in a special way. I conclude by considering the passages that lead Jonathan Lear to his fictionalist reading of Met. M3,1 and I argue that Aristotle is here describing useful heuristics for the teaching of geometry; he is not pronouncing on the meaning of mathematical talk.", pages = "239-260(22)", url = "http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/brill/phr/2009/00000054/00000003/art00002" doi = "doi:10.1163/156852809X441340" }