Friends,
The problem in discussing “substance” is its definition; there are more than ten. For example, when one says that atoms are the substance of matter, they are using the word substance in the sense of “chemical substance”. Substance in the philosophical sense and the sense in which it used when discussing transubstantiation is “that which underlies matter and from which matter’s form and properties derive”. The implication in this definition is that substance is formless. In the theological sense, in regards to transubstantiation, the substance involved is certainly not and atom or any other particle of matter.
The question of “substance” is an important one for all Roman Catholics, since we are uniquely committed to believe that at the consecration of the bread and wine, the substance of the bread and wine is transformed (replaced) by the substance of Jesus’ body and blood. Furthermore, the transformation of substances takes place without a transformation of the form and properties (accidentals) of the bread and wine. Also we know from the doctrine of the Trinity that God exists as three persons sharing the same substance. So, we can deduce that there are at least two substances existing in reality: material and spiritual. We can presume that the spiritual substance is unique to the Trinity and therefore infinite in both extent and divisibility.
So what do we say about the material substance of the bread and wine other than it is theologically different than the spiritual substance? First of all, modern science does not deal in the concept of “substance”, material or spiritual, because the philosophical principle to which science adheres is Logical Positivism. Logical Positivism emphasizes the meaning and use of language, but also defines the tenets on which modern science is based. Logical Positivism:
- rejects the idea that reality has some purpose;
- rejects any attempt to explain natural phenomena by attributing to it an essence or a secret cause of things;
- rejects as meaningless any explanation not verifiable through the senses;
- advocates the study of constant relationship among things without delving into the underlying causes.
Science is going to play its game on its home-field, so to deal with the nature of material substance we have to go at it philosophically.
Bread and wine are made of molecules and molecules are made of atoms. Atoms according to most scientific descriptions consist of a nucleus surrounded by a cloud of point-like electrons, organized in orbits. The diameter of the uranium atom is 23,000 times the diameter of its own nucleus. At the other end of the size spectrum, the diameter of the hydrogen atom is 145,000 times the diameter of its nucleus. Since electrons have no volume, the volume of matter resides in the nucleus, so the atom consists mostly of space. However, since the nucleus is constructed from protons and neutrons and they are compose of quarks and since quarks are point-like particles, the atom can be viewed as being completely spatial. Apparently matter dissolves into space when we subject it increasing granulation. Since the substance of all atoms is the same, and since all quarks and electrons are basically the same then all matter derives from the same substance. Thus, reality is reduced to two substances and both are of a spatial nature. Space can be either continuous or discrete. Of the two, continuous space is formless and infinite in extent and divisibility, properties that best fit the spiritual substance. Discrete space then is the substance of matter.
Yppop