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LongingSoul
Guest
I don’t really understand what you mean but it sounds like you might not be a believer in this branch of philosophy. I mentioned before that I only did one semester of philosophy and of that, the most interesting lesson was one on phenomenology. The lecture was not recorded as all lectures are and the Lecturer mentioned something of the nature that there was some hostility from modern philosophy towards this subject. He said however it was an important subject for the future. This was a Catholic University.All truths, by definition are incorporeal. even those in the Mind of God.
What Aquinas refers to a phantasms are what we call images. A great example is the Holy Spirit. We have images of the Spirit as a Dove and as a tongue of flame. That is how our mind envisions the object, the Holy Spirit.
The truth of an object is a property of the Object, not actually the object itself. So while we might use the phantasm of a dove ( a corporeal object) to remote to the object of the Holy Spirit, that does not impede us from knowing truths about the Holy Spirit.
Your example of the Holy Spirit and the dove is way off. Incorporeal things don’t have phantasms. The dove is a symbol of the Holy Spirit but not a phantasm. Phantasms are the sort of ‘spiritual’ properties of corporeal things. They are detected/abstracted by the senses at first and then dealt with by the mind to understand the fuller meaning of corporeal things than just what the matter conveys.
It’s a faculty has supported the advancement of civilization since the beginning but today we can see it ignored and rejected by those who promote gay marriage and the like.