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Neil_Anthony
Guest
Since modern physics pretty much disregards the notion of “substance” and focuses only on physical properties (accidents). In fact many people would deny that substance is real.
Consider a metal bowl. Its accidents include its diameter, its mass, its color, shape etc. Its substance is “bowl”. Now, imaging a craftsperson who uses a hammer to flatten the bowl into a plate. Now the metal has a different shape (one of the accidents), and a different substance. It’s new substance is “plate”.
When the craftsperson was hammering on the bowl to make it into a plate, what was the process by which the “bowl” substance went away, and the “plate” substance came into being? Did the bowl-ness slowly fade away as the height of the rim was reduced? Was there possibly an overlap time where two substances existed, bowl and plate, when it could have been used as either a shallow bowl or a deep plate? Is “bowlness” really something real, or is it just a description of what the metal object is most likely to be used as?
Consider a metal bowl. Its accidents include its diameter, its mass, its color, shape etc. Its substance is “bowl”. Now, imaging a craftsperson who uses a hammer to flatten the bowl into a plate. Now the metal has a different shape (one of the accidents), and a different substance. It’s new substance is “plate”.
When the craftsperson was hammering on the bowl to make it into a plate, what was the process by which the “bowl” substance went away, and the “plate” substance came into being? Did the bowl-ness slowly fade away as the height of the rim was reduced? Was there possibly an overlap time where two substances existed, bowl and plate, when it could have been used as either a shallow bowl or a deep plate? Is “bowlness” really something real, or is it just a description of what the metal object is most likely to be used as?