L
Lazerlike42
Guest
Ok, youāve got it, I think.This is good, Lazer, you would make ancient Socrates proud!
The first step to talking with someone and not at him is to come to an agreement about the meaning of the words you both use. We now have these two definitions:
**Substance **is the actual matter of a thing, as opposed to the appearance or shadow; reality. Substance is what makes a thing what it is, and that which cannot be changed without changing the thing itself. An example is the molecules H2O making up snow.
Accidents are the modifications that substance undergo, but that do not change the kind of thing that each substance is. Accidents only exist when they are the accidents of some substance. Examples are colors, weight, motion.
Now, lets apply these definitions to the point you were trying to explain to me:
It helps me to use examples, so iāll use that of a snowball. The substance of a snowball is, on a molecular level, H2O. An accident of a snowball is that it is white.
Now, if my schnauzer were to pee on the snowball, the substance would still be H2O, but the accidents might be yellow and white. Then again, if my son were to take the snowball inside and put it in the microwave oven and heat it for 10 minutes, the substance would change to hydrogen and oxygen molecules, as the snowball melts and then transforms into a gaseous form. The change of substance would, in effect, change what the snowball is. That is, it would cease to be a snowball.
Am i understanding substance and accidents correctly, Lazer?
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The thing is that the substance of a thing is not itās molecular structure. The molecular structure would be considered an accident. The molecular structure is a physical property. Itās what a thing is made of, not what a thing is.
I can see how this would be confusing, because youāre dealing with a very scientific world here. Thatās not to say science is bad - hardly! - but rather that science is dealing with things on one level, whereas philosophy deals with it on a deeper level. I think the key is really grasping why water is made of H2O. It is because God made it that way. It didnāt have to be; if God had wanted to make water be made of CH4 or NaCl, or if He had wanted water to be one of the four basic elements of matter, as ancient philosophers believed, He could have.
Water is H2O because God made water H2O. He could have made it differently. In other words, if God had wanted, āwaterā would not be H2O, but something else. The composition does not define water. Youāre getting confused because, in the world as God designed it, water is always made of H2O. But in the world as God made it, water is always transluscent, too, and itās always liquid and always weighs 1 gram per cubic centimeter. These things are all clearly accidents, and should help us to see through the confusion over the molecular structure.
So in other words, God could have made water in some other way, and so waterās composition does not define it. It does in our natural world, but the nature of reality extends far beyond our natural world.
In transubstantiation, God replaces the substance of the bread with the substance of Christ, but He changes the accidents of Christ to those of bread - the molecular structure included. He does this because it would simply gross us all out to eat flesh that looked like flesh, as, if you watched the video of the miracle of Naju that I linked, youād know from experience!
Peace and God bless!