Aquinas writes in his Contra Gentiles book one ch. 23 that "bodily things receive their accidents through the nature of their matter and cause them from their substance"
So matter can be in any form but each discrete thing has a form that makes it itself. Yet how is the form to be understood? — Gregory
He writes in ch. 55: "Our intellect cannot understand in act many things together. The reason is that, since intellect in act is its object in act, if intellect did understand many things together, it would follow that the intellect would at one and the same time many things.."
Why? Because the world is in us and we are in the world in the same respect. Aquinas is far more Kantian than you would expect him to be. — Gregory
The form\matter distinction I think is important for understanding the resurrection of the body, although these are matters of faith in Kant's view, and in mine — Gregory
Kant said however that we can know phenomena as it presents or appears to us. The noumena is what is unknowable and Aquinas says somewhere that we can't fully understand things without thinking with the mind of God. So maybe they agree. — Gregory
Kant holds that senses are more known by intellect than intelligible objects are know by us. This leads him to discount all Aquinas's arguments for God and I agree with that. — Gregory
I don't think we can know anything for sure and on this Kant's position seems most accurate. But Hegel started with Kant but added Aristotle's and Aquinas's ideas as phenomenologically relevant to understanding Kant's. We can't stay in a world where we know nothing and Aquinas is a good start in believing again in knowledge — Gregory
So for Aquinas substance comes out of matter by form and the appearance of substance is accidents? Then wouldn't essence, nature, and quiddity be just another word for the matter\form composition? There is another old Greek word used in this question to but I forget it — Gregory
Yes. Ideas are always in flux but we go with the best probabilities as they present themselves to our souls — Gregory
Aquinas says in Contra Gentile that stars, the moon, and the sun are unquantitative. He had very esoteric opinions on "heavenly bodies" as if they were Platonic Ideas instead of real matter. That's one of the reasons Galileo got in trouble when he used his telescope. People claim the telescopes were faulty, had dirt in them, or were instruments possessed by the devil — Gregory
I don't totally agree with you. I see no complete certainty in intellectual matters for us on earth. At the back of my mind I suspect it is all just matter that we know and think with. If I could prove spirituality it would be based on faith no more, right? — Gregory
This is why I don't think relativism refutes itself. Someone can think everything is relative and hold that belief on probable grounds, and that on probable grounds, to infinity and we don't understand infinity. Our bodies and everything is flux and we can't understand it. We are born to have faith, give mercy, and hope — Gregory
I can't think of anything I can hold on to, consider, and judge to be certain. — Gregory
Life moves too fast, at least for me. — Gregory
too much philosophy likes to break down instead of building up. — Gregory
The Catholic Church has defined that judgment comes right after death and that you don't wait to go to heaven. In my understanding though, the general judgment and the private judgment are the same and the soul never is nor can be without the body. So there is no afterlife like atheists say OR there is no death (the dead body being a shadow of your new body in paradise) — Gregory
Thanks for the thoughts. I'll just say someone who's mind is in constant flux cannot communicate his experience to someone who believes in absolute Truth — Gregory
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