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Linusthe2nd
Guest
No one is disputing the value of Newtonian or Modern Physics ( i.e. relativity and the Special Theory of Relativity or the ultimate mode or physicality nor any other scientific theory). What we are saying, what Feser says, what Thomas says is the " principal of motion " is valid. Neither Newtonian nor any other theory from modern physics disproves it.Par for the course. Yet Thomas did make mistakes in physics. For instance with light:
Now no local movement of a body can be instantaneous, as everything that moves from one place to another must pass through the intervening space before reaching the end: whereas the diffusion of light is instantaneous. Nor can it be argued that the time required is too short to be perceived; for though this may be the case in short distances, it cannot be so in distances so great as that which separates the East from the West. Yet as soon as the sun is at the horizon, the whole hemisphere is illuminated from end to end. - Art 2, newadvent.org/summa/1067.htm
Thomas was human, all humans make mistakes. Though I think he would be open to Newton and the last 300 years of learning rather than dismiss them to protect his arguments. Oh, well.
You are the one who is discriminating. Are you an Eliminativist? Sounds like it to me.
Set aside for a moment your bias in favor of " inertial motion " as defined by modern science and you will see that the " principal of motion " is valid. And both principles are valid in regard to the same object. People shoot guns and drop bombs and hopp in airplanes because it is a known fact that the " principle of motion " is valid. They not do these things because they adhere to the " principle of inertia " as understood by modern physics. And if you told them they were standing still they would hoot you off the stage. Perhaps I should have said that that would have been a real " howler, " to use one of your more descriptive adjectives.
And really, to poke fun at Aristotle and Aquinas for their " scientific " views is just ignorant. Perhaps you should actually read Aristotle’s Physics, etc. You will be amazed at just how scientific this old Greek was. It is not quite fair to look back on our 2,500 years of gradual scientific growth and accomplishment and poke fun at him or Aquinas. Besides, they lacked the whole of our present scientific infastructure and all our modern scientific paraphernalia. It is like making fun of a farmer in the 17th century for using a horse or ox to pull his plow. It isn’t his fault that he doesn’t live in the 21st cent. where farmers use powerful four wheeled drive tractors, with articulated stearing, and 200 horse power diesel engines, to pull a gang of 10 or 12 plows.
And by the way, neither I, nor Feser, nor any Thomist is dismissing the last 300 years of scientific progress, as you put it. That is a very prejudiced remark and you know it isn’t true. You know very well that many of the scientific advances of the past 300 years have been made by Christians ( including Catholics ), and this continues to be the case. Only yesterday I pointed your attention to Fr. William A. Wallace, a Physicist/ Philosopher/ Theologian. How about Fr. Robert Spitzer, doesn’t he count.
Be careful that in your rush to dismantle the Philosophy of Nature, Metaphysics, and The Philosophy of God that you don’t destroy, for yourself, the grounds for rationality- that you don’t wind up as a pure Idealist or perhaps an Eliminativist.
Go out and smell the roses, get an airing.
Linus2nd