B
Blue_Horizon
Guest
I was, I suppose, simply objecting to the phrase “flesh existing on its own” and “He grants that flesh on its own is a substance”.In ST IIIa5.3, Aquinas says, “For flesh and the other parts of man receive their species through the soul. Hence, if the soul is absent, there are no bones nor flesh, except equivocally, as is plain from the Philosopher (De Anima ii, 9; Metaph. vii, 34).” So as Stump says, “On his view, flesh existing on its own does not have the same form as flesh in an animal. That is because flesh in an animal can perform the functions proper to that flesh, as flesh existing on its own cannot.” He grants that flesh on its own is a substance but says that it is equivocal with flesh-as-integral-part-of-man, since it does not have the form of man (since it does not have the same whatness of flesh in man, its whatness is equivocal with flesh in man).
In any case, I’m not sure why you picked out that clause. Stump was considering a potential objection, “Since Aquinas is willing to grant that the flesh existing on its own is a substance, it seems that it must be a substance when it is in an animal as well.” “Willing-to-grant” and “believes/holds” are of course two different things. All “willing-to-grant” need mean is that Aquinas, in handling the objection, would refute it in some other way than denying that flesh on its own is a substance.
Flesh cannot properly exist “on its own” - even that it seems is an equivocal use of the word.
I think “flesh on its own” could not really be considered a substance as that would require some form of over-arching coherence/purpose which dead flesh does not have. It is just a complex collocation of biological elements that happen to be placed together.
Perhaps “flesh on its own” just refers to an understanding of living flesh abstracted from its particular “owner”. If that is the case isn’t really just playing with concepts that is ultimately not rational (like talking of wax without a shape).
Its only a small point.