
Relentless attack? Shirley Knot. That would mean at least one philosopher leading the charge in every generation since 1700. Please list these massed hoards of philosophers.
Parcing again, another sophism. Well, let’s start with Galileo and Newton and go from there. Perhaps you should read a little on the history of the Philosophy of Science, would you like some references. How about some of the works of Fr. Stanley Jaki, Dr. Wolfgang Smith, Fr. William A. Wallace. Pope Leo XIII, Pope Pius X, Pope Pius XII, Pope Paul VI, Pope John Paul II, Pope Benedict XVI, Dr. Anthony Rizzi, Dr. Peter Kreeft, Fr. Robert Spitzer, and your personal favorite, Dr. Edward Feser - just for starters.
Motion, however you define it, is physics. Not metaphysics. Not cake making. Not motorcycle maintenance.
You mean to tell me that I must receive a blessing from some scientist before I can point out the obvious? That is utter nonesense. If any scientist says that seriously, please find a quotation. And if you find one, I’ll show you a scientist who knows as little about science as you do. And Plato, Aristotle, and Thomas, and the Muslim and Jewish philosophers would disagree with you. So would any farmer out in the pasture chasing down his cows. I have never heard such a rediculous statement. It does you seriious discredit…
Science is about empirical evidence, meaning sense experience, observation, the things which are evident to our senses.
Did I say anything any different. Your problem is that you cannot draw distinctions. Science indeed studies these things but it first accepts them as self-evident facts of reality, the same reality that is accepted by unscientific folks in their everday lives. And science has no monopoly on self-evident facts. What you don’t recognize or refuse to recognize or are unable to recognize, because of your native prejudices, is that any one, including ST. Thomas, can make perfectly true statements about motion and other aspects of daily life without making
scientific statements. Call it common sense judgment or whatever. It is not scientific.
Science can indeed apply its methods on these things, but it does so using the scientific method. And that method is well defined. Its decision to make a
scientific study, according to the scientific method, separates its object from the ordinary judgments and experiences of life. It does not void these judgments and experiences as long as they are true in themselves, i.e. that they are self-evidently true…
I deny that in the world only some things are moving, as it’s evident to my senses that all things are moving. All things change continuously.
Thomas did not deny that " all " things are moving. He said, it is self-evident that
some things are moving. Perhaps he thought some things didn’t move. I don’t know that. But even if he might have thought that, so what. Today, thanks largely to science, we know better. However, everything also has a stable element, its nature, which remains the same throughout its life span or its term of existence as an identifiable being or substance.
And if you say that it is evident to your senses that " all things " are moving, then your sense of observation is faulty, to put it politely. It certainly is not evident to the vast majority of folks. Shall we do a poll?
Teresa de Ávila knew that: nada te turbe, nada te espante, todo se pasa, Dios no se muda (let nothing disturb you, let nothing frighten you, everything passes, God does not change).
Sorry I don’t read Spanish. But I applaud your ability. And with as much as you translated, I agree totally. Glad you are reading her. She can’t do you anything but good.
So it was a Catholic saint from my neck of the woods who started your so-called “relentless attack” around 1550, a couple of generations before Galileo and a while before your massed hoards.
Enlighten me. You might be right, and it wouldn’t surprise me.
Then Yoda, you have much to learn.
Just discussed that. Science can make it an object of study under the conditions stated above. It can prove common knowledge incorrect, but to make the blanket statement that movement is not true to common experience is unscientific. It is also false.
'Already did so several times in several ways on other threads. Was released for good behavior.
Nonsense, you haven’t proved a single thing yet but how prejudiced you are in your judgments.
Yikes, calm down, you’ll do yourself a mischief. Can you cite evidence that the majority of Catholics are the slightest bit bothered. or even know of, yon argumentums? Fashions come and fashions go, but we live by faith, not by sight

.
Don’t need to. Many Catholics are blissfully ignorant about many things, as are non-Catholics. They have been lulled to sleep by the constant barrage of propaganda and ideological information put out by the media and which covers college and university campuses. Yes, we are beginning to wake up. For the sake of the world I hope it isn’t too late, because if Catholicism is reduced to the backwaters of culture, the whole world will suffer greatly. There is certainly is nothing outside of Catholicism which shows even the mildest hope of meeting the current challenges.
Linus2nd