J
JohnDamian
Guest
Does anyone have any idea what he is going on about in this citation; I cannot make sense of it, and I don’t have a commentary either…
“The fact that we assumed the above is true, namely that whatever is in Brunellus other than the advening forms of Brunellus just is Brunellus; is plain because 1) the forms of Brunellus are not Brunellus, since in that case accidents would be substance, and 2) neither are the matter and the forms of Brunellus together Brunellus , since in that case one would have to grant the body and something already a body are body.”
From the First Theory of the (Abelards) glossus on Porphyry.
“The fact that we assumed the above is true, namely that whatever is in Brunellus other than the advening forms of Brunellus just is Brunellus; is plain because 1) the forms of Brunellus are not Brunellus, since in that case accidents would be substance, and 2) neither are the matter and the forms of Brunellus together Brunellus , since in that case one would have to grant the body and something already a body are body.”
From the First Theory of the (Abelards) glossus on Porphyry.