Do intellectual visions have qualia?

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Nor do I.

My point was to distinguish between the operation of the intellect in this life, as distinct from the operation of the intellect in the heavenly presence of God. I don’t think that the operation remains the same.

St. Thomas Aquinas taught that in the state of separation from the soul and body at death, there is a change of mode or manner in the operation of intellect (cf. Summa Theologica, I, 89). He asserted that, in this life, our intellect derives understanding through the use of what he called “phantasms” (sense-images of material things presented in the imagination).
In this life we still have a body. The will, intellect and imagination are faculties of the soul. I understand the Great Saints’ phantasms. IMO the quale of redness is possible in an interior intellectual vision. If the vision is of an attribute of God, it cannot be the Face of God Beatific Vision, whatever the Giver wishes to endue, is.

peace
 
…IMO the quale of redness is possible in an interior intellectual vision.
I agree. In fact, I believe that some sort of qualia is necessary for every intellectual vision. Even the visions described by St. Teresa, although lacking some qualia, appear to include other subjective qualities (qualia) of experience. The whole point of her description was to convey subjective qualities of that experience. Even if she could not see a face, there’s other qualia present, such as “nearness” of Jesus, that it was “Jesus Christ Our Lord Who had revealed Himself.” These are also qualia.

Speaking strictly with regard to revelations in this earthly life, St. Thomas’ taught that revelation by Divine power is presented in four ways: (1) sometimes by infusion of new ideas (i.e. intelligible species), (2) sometimes a new arrangement in the imagination of ideas already possessed, (3) sometimes an intelligle light that shows previously unseen implications in old ideas in their old arrangements, and (4) sometimes by the outward presentation of sensible images.

Abstraction from phantasms (sensible images) is necessary for some, but not all of these. He states, abstraction from the external senses is not rendered necessary when the mind is Divinely enlightened by an intellectual light or when Divinely infused with new ideas. However, even in these cases where abstraction is not necessary, St. Thomas insists the intellect must “turn to sensible objects” in its judgment. “The perfect judgment of the intellect is effected by its turning to sensible objects, which are the first principles of our knowledge, as stated in I, 84, 6.” [Summa Theologica IIb, 173, 3].

According to MSgr Paul J. Glenn, in his commentary on the Summa Theologica I, 84:
“Just as the intellect acquires ideas from phantasms, so it turns to phantasms when is uses knowledge already acquired… When we wish to think a thing out, we use examples to help ourselves understand, and such examples are phantasms; we also explain things to others by use of examples. While the intellect is a spiritual power and understands in universal, it is never, in this earthly life, wholly divorced from material things and individual sense-grasp. The intellect of bodily man aquires knowledge through phantasms, and uses knowledge by recurring to phantasms.” (MSgr. Paul Glenn, *A Tour of the Summa, *p. 71).
 
In post #60 itsjustdave1988 said "I ask if you’ve ever had a vision in your mind which does not derived its understanding, its context, from the material world? If so, what was it? " Imagine the answer to the first question is yes. How could one answer the second? This has been haunting me since post 60.

peace
 
In post #60 itsjustdave1988 said "I ask if you’ve ever had a vision in your mind which does not derived its understanding, its context, from the material world? If so, what was it? " Imagine the answer to the first question is yes. How could one answer the second? This has been haunting me since post 60.

peace
how about “love”, “the square root of 2”, “justice”, and pretty much all abstract thought
 
In post #60 itsjustdave1988 said "I ask if you’ve ever had a vision in your mind which does not derived its understanding, its context, from the material world? If so, what was it? " Imagine the answer to the first question is yes. How could one answer the second? This has been haunting me since post 60.

peace
I think this is exactly the point that St. Thomas makes in his Summa. No matter how man obtains knowledge in this life, either through experience or when given an intellectual vision directly, we must still turn to sense-image in the judgment or understanding of that knowledge or vision, and secondly, to convey that understanding to another also requires turning to sense-image.

Jesus spoke in parables to describe the kingdom of God. I think He did so for the very reason that our intellect needs sense-image to be able to grasp an idea.
 
how about “love”, “the square root of 2”, “justice”, and pretty much all abstract thought
Abstraction derives from sense-image.

According to Msgr Paul Glenn’s commentary on Summa Theologica I, 88:
We know material things by turning the light of the agent intellect on phantasms; this is a sort of intellectual X-ray which penetrates what is individual in the phantasms and shows up their essence. We call this process abstraction. We say that the intellect abstracts its ideas from phantasms. This is a kind of process of de-materializing and de-individualizing material things. And we can continue this process, refining more and more, drawing ideas from ideas, and reaching more and more abstract ideas.
I’m a electrical engineer. I deal with many abstract ideas. None of them are independent of sense-image.
 
Abstraction derives from sense-image.

According to Msgr Paul Glenn’s commentary on Summa Theologica I, 88:
We know material things by turning the light of the agent intellect on phantasms; this is a sort of intellectual X-ray which penetrates what is individual in the phantasms and shows up their essence. We call this process abstraction. We say that the intellect abstacts it ideas from phantasms. This is a kind of process of de-materializing and de-individualing material things. And we can continue this process, refining more and more, drawing ideas from ideas, and reaching more and more abstract ideas.
I’m a electrical engineer. I deal with many abstract ideas. None of them are independent of sense-image.
and what do you think I am, a mailman? look at my profile :cool:

btw, “nearness” is not a qualia.

David Chalmers has a good description of types of qualia in pages 6 to 9 of his book The Conscious Mind, here’s a link to the whole book in pdf for free; teslhome.com/download.ASP?n=THE%20CONSCIOUS%20MIND.pdf

start on page 6 where it says A catalog of conscious experience
 
and what do you think I am, a mailman? look at my profile :cool:

btw, “nearness” is not a qualia.

David Chalmers has a good desciption of types of qualia in pages 6 to 9 of his book The Conscious Mind, here’s a link to the whole book in pdf for free; teslhome.com/download.ASP?n=THE%20CONSCIOUS%20MIND.pdf

start on page 6 where it says A catalog of conscious experience
Ronnie,

I’m baffled by your tone. You presented a question, which I presumed you wanted people to help you to answer. Yet, when I gave a response, supported with references to the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas, you seem to get upset over it.

I get that you disagree with St. Thomas Aquinas. I’m not convinced that Catholic mystics, many of them Thomist in their theology, have presented a theological description which greatly varies from that of St. Thomas. Even if they had, I see no reason to get upset over it.
 
Ronnie,

I’m baffled by your tone. You presented a question, which I presumed you wanted people to help you to answer. Yet, when I gave a response, supported with references to the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas, you seem to get upset over it.

I get that you disagree with St. Thomas Aquinas. I’m not convinced that Catholic mystics, many of them Thomist in their theology, have presented a theological description which greatly varies from that of St. Thomas. Even if they had, I see no reason to get upset over it.
Huh? I wasn’t upset, not even a little, I was just pointing out the “I’m an electrical engineer and understand abstract thought in a way you can’t” card didn’t really work with me because I’m an electrical engineer. And I gave you the link to Chalmers’ book because at least a couple of posters here seemed to be misusing the word “qualia”. That’s all, I’m not upset with you or anyone else.
 
As for what “qualia” is, I understand the term in the broad sense described by the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: “The phenomenal character of an experience is what it is like subjectively to undergo the experience. If you are told to focus your attention upon the phenomenal character of your experience, you will find that in doing so you are aware of certain qualities. These qualities — ones that are accessible to you introspectively and that together make up the phenomenal character of the experience are standardly called ‘qualia’.”
 
Abstraction derives from sense-image.

According to Msgr Paul Glenn’s commentary on Summa Theologica I, 88:
We know material things by turning the light of the agent intellect on phantasms; this is a sort of intellectual X-ray which penetrates what is individual in the phantasms and shows up their essence. We call this process abstraction. We say that the intellect abstracts its ideas from phantasms. This is a kind of process of de-materializing and de-individualizing material things. And we can continue this process, refining more and more, drawing ideas from ideas, and reaching more and more abstract ideas.
I’m a electrical engineer. I deal with many abstract ideas. None of them are independent of sense-image.
An electrical engineer, eh? One of your comrads, then, Franklin Merrell-Wolff wrote a few books on this matter, notably The philosophy of Consciousness Without An Object. In his previous book, in which he chronicles his consideraton on the way to the event that led him to write that, he deals extensively with the idea of qualia. Very interesting. That one is called Pathways Through to Space Both you and Hazcompat might find it very useful.
 
What is it about the qualia of interior intellectual vision that haunts you?

peace
 
An electrical engineer, eh? One of your comrads, then, Franklin Merrell-Wolff wrote a few books on this matter, notably The philosophy of Consciousness Without An Object. In his previous book, in which he chronicles his consideraton on the way to the event that led him to write that, he deals extensively with the idea of qualia. Very interesting. That one is called Pathways Through to Space Both you and Hazcompat might find it very useful.
Thanks for the reference. I’m from the “truth is objective” school of thought, however, as the contrary makes little rational sense to me. But I’ll take a look see.
 
I agree that truth is objective when dealing with the quadrants of experience labeled “it” and “it’s” The interior quadrants labeled “I” and “we” bear a degree and kind of interpretation through all nine of their levels. The purely objective approach has the same defect whether it is the soul-less approach of materialism to spirit, or the strictly dogmatic, which is yet materialistic/legalistic, to the realm of spirit. It is for this reason that religion is as often an obstacle to spirituality as it is an aid.
 
I haven’t had a chance to keep up with this thread very well or put my two cents in for awhile so I’ll weigh in now on a couple points for better or worse.

In Summa 1,1,9, SA is telling us that God uses metaphor to describe spiritual truths to humans because we are, after all, human, and in our finiteness can only relate to material things. Most of us, I think, already understand our limitations here. We can’t conceive of “nothingness”, for example, so the word “nothing” is an abstract term; we can only relate no thing to some thing. Alternatively the Jews used a concrete concept, that of “darkness” to connote nothingness. And Jesus isn’t really a vine and heaven isn’t really upwards and God doesn’t have arms with which to gather His flock.

Anyway this section of the Summa doesn’t address anything directly having to do with mystical experiences, which, by definition, transcend natural human capabilities and the materialistic world to begin with. I think part of the problem here is that we’re still trying to understand the ineffable-sort of a contradiction in terms-but we can’t really help it. In any case I’d rather trust the experience of St Teresa on this-and I don’t think she contradicts SA anyway. Intellectual visions are exactly what they sound like and that’s exactly what distinguishes them from imaginative visions, etc.

And why shouldn’t they be ineffable? We can’t even explain everyday faith to an atheist, because faith, also is a supernatural gift-a grace-along with its sister theological virtues of hope and love.

163 Faith makes us taste in advance the light of the beatific vision, the goal of our journey here below. Then we shall see God “face to face”, “as he is”.47 So faith is already the beginning of eternal life:
When we contemplate the blessings of faith even now, as if gazing at a reflection in a mirror, it is as if we already possessed the wonderful things which our faith assures us we shall one day enjoy.


And what is it that we contemplate and know by faith? We have knowledge of things which absolutely cannot be proven. And why wouldn’t God give some saints a more immediate taste of this vision, so that the rest of us would be encouraged by what they saw?

In the end, this thread brings up some interesting points but it’s sort of like counting angels on a pinhead and most of it ends up being opinion and conjecture-and certainly nothing worth dividing over. But I’d still trust St Teresa. 🙂
 
Many saints have visions and locutions. They are of the type mentioned: corporal, imaginative and intellectual. God makes Himself known on many levels. For most of us, He works through sour senses in an ordinary manner, but often He uses the things He created as signs if we are aware of looking for signs.

Very few souls are chosen through intense preparation to make reparation for the sins of another soul or for direct grievances against Our Lord and His Blessed Mother. As we readily know, because of the evils in our society, “the cup is brimming over.” One of these saints or venerables is Sister Josefa Menendez who was a member of a convent in Poitiers. She was unknown and unaccounted for in the world but chosen by Our Lord to suffer the pains of carrying His cross and wearing the crown of thorns for various periods. In other words, she was a “victim soul.” Sometimes Our Lord appeared to her as a baby and as a young child as well as an adult.

What I find extremely interesting about Sister Josepha’s account is her invitation to enter the wound of the side of Our Lord. She doesn’t explain what she sees. I don’t know about any qualia in a vision of this sort and can’t define whether it intellectual or not. Like other saints, including the St. John Vianney and St. Pio, she was attacked by the devil and beaten severely. She was also made to walk through hell and see the tortured souls. Many were saved on account of her prayers and sufferings even though she initially had felt repugnance to this way of reparation and just wanted to live the ordinary life of a Christian.

I think the visions of Fatima and Lourdes and Guadelupe might have been corporeal in nature. St. Teresa of Avila says, that corporeal visions are more likely to be false than the imaginative and intellectual in which the soul has certainty. But she adds that the devil can take any disguise and that sometimes she had what she called “false” visions. She discerned they were false because they exhorted a spirit of pride in her but that there were times she wasn’t always certain.

That all of our earthy knowledge comes from our senses is understood, but when it comes to spiritual matters, we really don’t understand God’s workings in souls other than that He infuses knowledge. For example, when a person of any age dies, including an infant, they both are given the knowledge, understanding and wisdom of all that is in the world and in heaven.

P.S. I can’t say I’m absolutely certain of the above, and I’d welcome any discourse or comment or correction. 🙂

Many blessings!
 
Many saints have visions and locutions. They are of the type mentioned: corporal, imaginative and intellectual. God makes Himself known on many levels. For most of us, He works through sour senses in an ordinary manner, but often He uses the things He created as signs if we are aware of looking for signs.

Very few souls are chosen through intense preparation to make reparation for the sins of another soul or for direct grievances against Our Lord and His Blessed Mother. As we readily know, because of the evils in our society, “the cup is brimming over.” One of these saints or venerables is Sister Josefa Menendez who was a member of a convent in Poitiers. She was unknown and unaccounted for in the world but chosen by Our Lord to suffer the pains of carrying His cross and wearing the crown of thorns for various periods. In other words, she was a “victim soul.” Sometimes Our Lord appeared to her as a baby and as a young child as well as an adult.

What I find extremely interesting about Sister Josepha’s account is her invitation to enter the wound of the side of Our Lord. She doesn’t explain what she sees. I don’t know about any qualia in a vision of this sort and can’t define whether it intellectual or not. Like other saints, including the St. John Vianney and St. Pio, she was attacked by the devil and beaten severely. She was also made to walk through hell and see the tortured souls. Many were saved on account of her prayers and sufferings even though she initially had felt repugnance to this way of reparation and just wanted to live the ordinary life of a Christian.

I think the visions of Fatima and Lourdes and Guadelupe might have been corporeal in nature. St. Teresa of Avila says, that corporeal visions are more likely to be false than the imaginative and intellectual in which the soul has certainty. But she adds that the devil can take any disguise and that sometimes she had what she called “false” visions. She discerned they were false because they exhorted a spirit of pride in her but that there were times she wasn’t always certain.

That all of our earthy knowledge comes from our senses is understood, but when it comes to spiritual matters, we really don’t understand God’s workings in souls other than that He infuses knowledge. For example, when a person of any age dies, including an infant, they both are given the knowledge, understanding and wisdom of all that is in the world and in heaven.

P.S. I can’t say I’m absolutely certain of the above, and I’d welcome any discourse or comment or correction. 🙂

Many blessings!
Regarding the P.S., you have hundred percent agreement from me, that was a fine summary of many things I’ve also read. Well said
 
…That all of our earthy knowledge comes from our senses is understood, but when it comes to spiritual matters, we really don’t understand God’s workings in souls other than that He infuses knowledge.
I agree that the degree of certainty with which we can understand what happens in our soul is only as good as the reasoning processes illumined by faith. St. Thomas’ explanations are an example of “speculative theology.” He offers “an explanation” which was derived from reason, Scripture, philosophy, and the writings of the early Church fathers, especially Augustine. Speculative theology, helps to illuminate understanding, but I don’t think anybody should think that which is theologically speculative is to be assented to with the same kind of assent as doctrine or dogma. The degree of certainty, like all philosophical conclusions, are to be accepted only based upon the strength of the argument, to include the authoritative support used in that argument.

What I like about St. Thomas is his method. He is guided by authority, which ought to be the sovereign guide of every theologian. His understanding comes from reasoning upon the centuries of thinkers who came before him, holding Scripture and Tradition as the highest authority. I think the understanding he offers is congruent with Scripture and Tradition, as well as the philosophy of his day. Modern philosophy appears lost in sophistry compared to the perennial philosophy of St. Thomas.
For example, when a person of any age dies, including an infant, they both are given the knowledge, understanding and wisdom of all that is in the world and in heaven.
I don’t think the separated soul necessarily knows all individual things in heaven and earth, but instead knows to the extent established by Divine order. St. Thomas describes this example as well in his Summa, giving his explanation of how the operation of the intellect necessarily changes after the soul separates from the body. Summa Theologica I, questions 75-102 is where he describes the nature of man and his soul, q. 89 is where he speaks of knowledge in the separated human soul. It is only later in his Summa, IIb q. 171-178 where he speaks of “Gratuitous Graces” Divinely bestowed to certain men and women (e.g. prophets), and q. 173 is where he describes his understanding of how the intellect works when it receives such Divinely imparted knowledge. He concludes that some but not all Divinely bestowed knowledge requires “abstraction” from sense-image, but goes on to state that for all such knowledge, “the perfect judgment of the intellect is effected by its turning to sensible objects, which are the first principles of our knowledge, as stated in I, 84, 6.” In other words, St. Thomas explicitly joins his understanding of Divinely bestowed knowledge (IIb, 173) with his previously asserted understanding of the nature of man and his soul (I, 84). In this earthly life, sense-image is used no matter how the knowledge was gained, sometimes through abstraction, but always during the intellectual judgment of the knowledge received.

Could St. Thomas be wrong? Sure. But I’ve not seen an argument as to why St. Thomas is necessarily wrong. Again, this is theology, not doctrine. It makes sense and is congruent with Christian doctrine. Perhaps there’s a substantially different explanation which also makes sense and is congruent with doctrine. If there is, I’m not familiar with it.
 
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