Quote:
Originally Posted by Linusthe2nd
I’m tired of arguing definitions, but would you two be so kind as to tell me what you think,
“God is omnipresent means”?
Linus2nd responds.
That is not my statement, it was a statement made by Yppop
Humans can also be said to be present, though our essence is contained in a soul which is not itself “present” anywhere really. I think what it means for a soul to “be” somewhere is that it has causal correlation to that area. Humans fit this definition because since the soul has direct causal influence on the brain, it can be said to “be” wherever its body is.
Thomas Aquinas would say that the entire soul is present in every part of the body. And naturally it has a causal relation to every part of the body. It governs and directs every operation of the person, vegative, sentient, and intellectual. That is why the Church calls the soul the form of the body.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peterp Plato
Just as an aside to this question. Anyone who thinks that matter or “the material” has definitive properties that can readily be defined are forgetting completely that the descriptions for those properties depend upon modes of expression that are ultimately immaterial, i.e., mental, in nature. We have absolutely zero knowledge of material things that is NOT expressed as ideas, conceptions, imaginings, visualizations, etc., that are all mental constructs.
Material reality can only be understood, imagined, perceived or conceptualized within the constraints of our mental faculties. The way I read a term like “objective reality,” in the way you have used it, is as an attempt to distill what is the spiritual, mental or immaterial that makes us, qua thinking agents, what we are (subjective agents), from our imposition of subjective experiences (the inherent way we experience things) onto what is essentially a completely external reality (material.) As such, “objective reality” makes a great deal of sense to me, but “material reality,” if it is anything, can only be understood through the lens of objective reality, which is, I take it, the background reality that allows any possibility of “physical reality” - the material as it is available to us via perception, visualization and conception - to occur. As such the material (largely unknown) is distinct from “physical reality” and from the superordinate, and, ultimately, “objective” reality. Am I correct about your meaning?
. You’re on the brink of figuring out that to be perceived is what constitutes the essence of material reality. Don’t listen to Linus .
I suppose we could quibble about how to explain how we know objective reality outside our minds, but as long as we agree that we do indeed know objective reality outside our minds that is the important thing. Because if we did not know this reality science would be impossible to do and even daily life would be impossible.
Linus2nd