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grannymh
Guest
In my opinion, the term “rational animal” has content when one considers Aristotle’s legacy. Is my memory correct in that rational was added to animal to distinguish man from beast? To me, rational animal is another way of explaining human nature as an unique unification of both the material and spiritual worlds, decomposing anatomy and spiritual soul.Hmmmnnn. Still not so sure. I have always felt that the great weakness/strength of Scholasticism (responsible for Catholic heavy reliance on the concept of clearly delineated static natures) is its reliance on the concept of nature/substance which in practice uses the supporting concepts of genus/species to separate out one nature from another. Thus humans are “rational animals” which doesn’t seem to have a lot of solid content to play with or make deductions from by itself.
To avoid that problem, I chose the deductive method with basic axioms (top down) instead of the inductive method used in science. Thus, my premises or presuppositions are simple true statements according to Catholicism. For example, 1. God as Creator exists, and 2. God as Creator interacts with humans.The other problem is that “being human” actually involves possessing a lot of potentials we cannot actuate unaided.
Because I am using information from the first three chapters of Genesis, I now believe I need to better connect axioms I. and 2. By connecting them with simple basic statements about human nature, the communication (Divine Revelation) can be established.
.And if our nature can be diminished (“wounded”) then it can be increased also. Thus the idea of a fixed static nature in fact starts to break down when we start talking about “divinisation”, “wounds”, “praeter-natural”, external gifts needed for our “basic nature” to work as intended
I have trouble wrapping my brain around the concept of a “diminished human nature” because man has been referred to as a spiritual creature and even a religious being. (CCC, 396; CCC, 28) I learned about the praeter-natural gifts when I had a pet dinosaur. Consequently, I used Google to refresh my memory. I did get the impression that these gifts were external and not integral to our basic human nature.
In addition, CCC, 405 gives the information that our human nature was not totally corrupted. It was wounded in the natural powers proper to it. I am unclear how “diminished” fits in with this. Actually, I am not all that concerned because the “unity” in human nature, soul and body, is so profound that one has to consider the soul to be the “form” of the body. (CCC, 365) This profound unity is basically the same as Adam’s with the exception that our human nature is wounded, that is, we are without original holiness and the harmony of original justice. (CCC, section “Man in Paradise” paragraphs 374-379)
Continued in following post.