P
polytropos
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I think you and I both know that was not what I meant where you quoted me. I do not know if Aquinas used the phrase immaterial soul. But someone like Oderberg has carefully defined the term in a way that meshes with Aquinas’s arguments here.Cheers, that is exactly what I suspected…“immaterial soul” was coined by their interpreters. And the reason I suspected this is because I believe I understand their system’s well enough to know they would never have intentionally coined such a phrase. Apologies if I had to drag this one out - it was my original question afterall.
Terms in philosophy mean what they are defined to mean. If you have a gut feeling that Aquinas wouldn’t use the term “immaterial soul,” that’s fine with me. I’ve defined the term in a way consistent with the Thomist tradition and Aquinas’s own arguments.
Well, our imaginations can construct a “fake” form (like that of a unicorn). Unicorns don’t have instances (as far as we are aware).Hmmnn. Not sure I agree. That we cannot deal in these forms without a phantasm suggests the phantasm is somehow a reference/pointer type stand-in for the missing “instance”? Hence they still need to be “instantiated” to exist - though obviously they exist instantiated a way different from what the senses perceive.
To visualize the unicorn, we are using a visual sense. But I’m not claiming that we could perform all of the same mental visualization/imagination acts that we could do while alive after our deaths.
I was disambiguating here, not arguing. But we’ve gone over the arguments for the intellect. They are not intrinsically illogical and assertive. You don’t agree with argument from universality, but your objection just gestured toward biology. And you didn’t respond to the argument from indeterminacy of the physical. So the quoted assertion has been adequately supported for the purposes of our discussion.As noted above I find the above to be a mere assertion with no intrinsic logic.
It seems like the most charitable way to read “physical” here is “concrete” as opposed to “abstract.” From context, that clearly seems to be Oderberg’s intent.I appreciate your putting it into your own words but I find "*physical *essence…is immaterial " to be a somewhat contradictory and confusing.
That is a material2 form. The teleological, unifying principle of a substance just is form. For dogs as for trees as for basic elements etc., that form is material2. (Likewise, your digestion is a material2 process. It is a teleological process, but material2 nonetheless.)But further, isn’t there a third meaning of immaterial here?
The soul of a dog is just as immaterial as that of a human (though you would say the human soul is “properly” immaterial). Now the dog’s soul is immaterial in a different way than immaterial1 (abstracted universals). It is the unseen teleological principle that unifies all the biological processes of the matter that is the dog. Yet it is real, and it isn’t immaterial2 from what I can see.
Material2 means not immaterial2, going off of how I defined the latter term.You’ve lost me. Where did material2 come from and what does it mean?
You said that you thought the Thomistic account of the soul was weaker than arguments of natural theology. I responded by saying that it was my impression, based on contemporary literature in philosophy of religion and philosophy of mind, that hylemorphism has a pretty solid foundation. I don’t regard it as a weak point of the Thomist synthesis at all.OK. I just don’t understand why you mentioned dualism/materialism when directly commenting on me when I said “I believe the logic…[is weak] which forces us to accept that human intellection must require an immaterial soul…”