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Geremia
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In an interesting article by Ralph McInery on St. Thomas Aquinas, he says, in the section “Body & Soul,” that one might
My questions are, in this vein:
I also found an interesting article about how Christians should be Physicalists. Certain forms of Physicalism are not equivalent to materialism.think then that, not being a dualist, Aquinas must be a physicalist, there being only two broad possible positions. Now, the difficulties of providing an adequate account of just what Physicalism is are well known. But suppose we take a minimal characterization of Physicalism as involving the claim that there is some privileged physical science or set of physical sciences, using the term ‘physical’ merely nominally and sociologically as we use it of certain sciences today, that ideally will provide a fully adequate account of all that exists and the fundamental characteristics of reality. Then Aquinas cannot be understood to be a physicalist, since the result of his analysis of perception and thought was to say that these activities are “immaterial,” which was to say, not adequately captured by the kinds of physical descriptions that do adequately account for much of the being and change we observe in the world. There are actually many variations on Dualism and Physicalism in play in recent philosophy. However, the difficulty of placing Aquinas in the broad outlines of that setting ought now to be clear.
My questions are, in this vein:
- How does St. Thomas reconcile free-will with the seeming determinism and limits in the physical world? (Cf. [ article on thisSumma (http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1083.htm#article1).)
- Modern physics studies that upon which human bodies are based. Could the nature of atoms, e.g., contain within them clues about what it means to be human?