L
liquidpele
Guest
Most will, but some will regenerate. You can even slice their head down the middle and it’ll grow 2 heads for the one body.I always thought if you cut a worm in two it will die?
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planarians
Most will, but some will regenerate. You can even slice their head down the middle and it’ll grow 2 heads for the one body.I always thought if you cut a worm in two it will die?
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A Roomba is a robot programmed by humans to do certain things and act in certain ways. So are you saying that animals are just God’s robots? I don’t think Catholic theology would agree. So my OP was based on the idea that there must be a “soul” of some kind. Everyone on this thread is getting so worked up about the term “soul,” but I think it makes perfect sense if you lay down your definitions: humans have rational souls that live forever, and animals have simple souls that do not continue after death. We are made in the image and likeness of God; animals are not.asking if an animal has a soul is on par with asking if a roomba has a soul. subtract our natural prediliction for projective parodelia and anthropomorphic world views and we come to a nano molecular robot, known as an animal, differing in substance but not kind from any complicated, programmable machine, like a roomba. sentiment aside, i see no reason to believe that animals have actual souls.
In other words, “I’m a troll, please report me.” Thanks for telling me, Liquid.Hey, I’m not the one that cares, I was simply pointing out that a lot of Catholics believe that animals do have a kind of soul, so you believe whatever you want. As for the dimensions, you claimed only one could fit, so you obviously must know their dimensions otherwise you wouldn’t have made an exact claim… so lets here your logic on why only one would fit on a pin.
Are you serious? You made a claim, I pointed out that other Catholics (including apologists on this site) disagreed with you, and you call me a troll. Very mature with the ad hominem. I’ll stop replying to you now as you’ve made it apparent that you’d rather believe yourself to be right than have a discussion, so enjoy the last word.In other words, “I’m a troll, please report me.” Thanks for telling me, Liquid.
These make sense, but they seem more to be an issue of semantics and language than metaphysics. Did these ideas play a role in the development in certain languages, or were they taken from the abstract realm of verbs and adjectives and solidified by Aristotle for the sake of creating a philosophical system? In other words, which came first?Well, good question.
If you deny the distinction between substance and accident, then I guess you could say “blue” could exist in itself and not necessarily in something. You could say that any action can have substantial being … that is, “Running” could exist in itself … you could hold “Running” because it would be like holding a “ball” (which is a legitimate substance). In short, characteristics could exist by themselves. Crazy stuff like that. Most people wouldn’t think those crazy things.
Also, if you deny the distinction between primary and secondary substance … such as, if you think there are only primary substances, you couldn’t say that there are multiple things of the same kind. For example, you couldn’t say that there are multiple horses, because that would imply that each of them is a “horse” (referring to its secondary substance) but if primary substance only exists then you have to call them completely different things.
Does that make sense? Those are some of the crazy consequences if you deny these Aristotelian and Thomistic concepts. A lot of this is just common sense, but Aristotle (and his successors) merely systemized it and developed a consistent way to talk about this stuff. When you get into complicated debates, it is necessary to hash out distinctions of this level of detail.
for me the problem of temporary animal souls, is that they arent necessary, there is no evidence that animals arent simply meatbots, so to speak, in order to function a roomba needs no soul, and i dont see why that is necessary to the functioning of animals. on a most basic level they are robots. programmed by evolution. i just dont see a reason for wjhy animals must have a soul.A Roomba is a robot programmed by humans to do certain things and act in certain ways. So are you saying that animals are just God’s robots? I don’t think Catholic theology would agree. So my OP was based on the idea that there must be a “soul” of some kind. Everyone on this thread is getting so worked up about the term “soul,” but I think it makes perfect sense if you lay down your definitions: humans have rational souls that live forever, and animals have simple souls that do not continue after death. We are made in the image and likeness of God; animals are not.
Very interesting indeed. I look forward to hearing explanations on this.A much more interesting question along the same lines is the case of identical twins in humans.
I think Bluegoat hit the nail on the head. Whether it’s worms or identical twins, when there becomes a case of two bodies, somehow God makes it so there are two souls where previously there was only one. We don’t know how, but it just is.…[W]ith plants and animals, the soul is completely attached to/contained within the matirial body - they are one. So it should be no surprise that if the body divides somehow the soul would too.
A much more interesting question along the same lines is the case of identical twins in humans.
I can see why you’d say that. My opinion is that there is a thin dividing line between the semantics and metaphysics. If you read Aristotle’s metaphysics, it seems like a lot of it has to do with the use of language. But it’s not just words, it’s making sure how the words are used and what they refer to. You see, metaphysics is the “study of being,” and “being” means “that which can exist.” In other words, metaphysics studies the basic principles behind existence and how to consider existence in its various forms. It thus becomes the universal science that applies to all possible sciences. And a lot of that has to do with how words are used to express and refer to beings.These make sense, but they seem more to be an issue of semantics and language than metaphysics.
Good question. I think (as far as I know) they developed more or less together. Perhaps some basic grammatical ideas were developed prior to metaphysical theories, but it is true that advanced semantics was only made possible by a developed metaphysical theory.Did these ideas play a role in the development in certain languages, or were they taken from the abstract realm of verbs and adjectives and solidified by Aristotle for the sake of creating a philosophical system? In other words, which came first?
Good question. There’s a couple ways to interpret what your question is exactly asking …Areopagite,
Yes, that answers a lot of questions; I appreciate you taking the time to write such a detailed response. One more (for now) question though. This may be related or unrelated, depending on how you look at it. Did God create the ideas of metaphysics, logic, etc.? Or are they inherent conditions governing the laws of existence, including the existence of God?
Yes all living things have souls. That is what animates them.5-animals have souls?