B
BillikenBill
Guest
First, I understand transubstantiation as the doctrine that the substance of bread and wine is replaced with the substance of the body and blood of Jesus Christ such that only the appearance of bread and wine remains.
Here is the difficulty: It seems that the Aristotelian idea that there are multiple types of being is incoherent, and with it the idea of substance vs accident. To see this, consider the sentence:
Socrates is not the same as whiteness.
Now it would seem that this sentence is obviously true, but a difficulty quickly arises if one looks closer. Specifically, given that Socrates and whiteness are in different categories of being, there can be no definition of same to accommodate the contrast. For example, ‘same’ cannot mean that Socrates and whiteness are not the same substance, for whiteness is not a substance, nor can it mean that Socrates and whiteness are not the same quantity, for neither are quantities, nor can it mean that Socrates and whiteness are not the same qualities, for Socrates is not a quality, and so on for all the categories. Thus, the above statement is rendered meaningless.
Of course, we intuitively think that there is a sense in which Socrates and whiteness are not the same thing, namely that they are different in virtue of existing in different categories of being. But note what this intuition presupposes: that Socrates and whiteness both share the property of existence, and indeed this is true of all the categories; all modes of being share the property of existence.
But this conclusion, that the members of all categories share a common sense of existence, is precisely opposite of the theory that being (i.e. existence) is subject to categorical distinctions. Thus, Aristotle’s metaphysics are self-referentially incoherent, implicitly denying what is explicitly affirmed.
Here is the difficulty for transubstantiation. If the underlying metaphysics is incoherent, then there is no distinction between substance and accident. Thus, rather than say that the substance of Christ replaces the substance of the bread, one would say that the region of space-time in question instantiates the bread at one moment, and then at the time of consecration also instantiates Christ. It wouldn’t be essentially bread or essentially Christ since nothing is essentially anything if my above argument is correct, and being can only be understood in a single sense. The problem with this view, however, is that it results in consubstantiation, which has been condemned as heretical. Are there any other options here? Any thoughts?
Here is the difficulty: It seems that the Aristotelian idea that there are multiple types of being is incoherent, and with it the idea of substance vs accident. To see this, consider the sentence:
Socrates is not the same as whiteness.
Now it would seem that this sentence is obviously true, but a difficulty quickly arises if one looks closer. Specifically, given that Socrates and whiteness are in different categories of being, there can be no definition of same to accommodate the contrast. For example, ‘same’ cannot mean that Socrates and whiteness are not the same substance, for whiteness is not a substance, nor can it mean that Socrates and whiteness are not the same quantity, for neither are quantities, nor can it mean that Socrates and whiteness are not the same qualities, for Socrates is not a quality, and so on for all the categories. Thus, the above statement is rendered meaningless.
Of course, we intuitively think that there is a sense in which Socrates and whiteness are not the same thing, namely that they are different in virtue of existing in different categories of being. But note what this intuition presupposes: that Socrates and whiteness both share the property of existence, and indeed this is true of all the categories; all modes of being share the property of existence.
But this conclusion, that the members of all categories share a common sense of existence, is precisely opposite of the theory that being (i.e. existence) is subject to categorical distinctions. Thus, Aristotle’s metaphysics are self-referentially incoherent, implicitly denying what is explicitly affirmed.
Here is the difficulty for transubstantiation. If the underlying metaphysics is incoherent, then there is no distinction between substance and accident. Thus, rather than say that the substance of Christ replaces the substance of the bread, one would say that the region of space-time in question instantiates the bread at one moment, and then at the time of consecration also instantiates Christ. It wouldn’t be essentially bread or essentially Christ since nothing is essentially anything if my above argument is correct, and being can only be understood in a single sense. The problem with this view, however, is that it results in consubstantiation, which has been condemned as heretical. Are there any other options here? Any thoughts?