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”.
Speaking as a physicist, I don’t agree with your premise that modern physics pretty much disregards the notion of substance; it may term the essential character of an object by different terms (particularly if describing it quantum mechanically). And if you go back to Aristotle’s “Physics” he treats the example you gave (quoted from the internet): * So the ingredients Aristotle insists on are: an underlying subject, a form (i.e., a positive property) and a lack (or privation) of that form. Aristotle’s examples illustrate these ingredients:*
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*1. A man who was unmusical becomes musical.*
*2. Some bronze (which was shapeless) becomes a statue. *
*In case (a), the subject is man, the form is musical and the privation is unmusical. In case (b), the subject is bronze, the form is statue and the privation is shapeless. The subject—the man, or the bronze—persists through the change. Of the other terms involved, the earlier ones (unmusicality, shapelessness) cease to exist, while the later ones (musicality, the statue) come into existence.
These were cases of coming into being (generation), since lacks or privations were replaced by forms. Ceasing to be (destruction) occurs when a form is replaced by a privation—when matter is deprived of form. This would happen, for example, when a statue is melted down into a shapeless pool of bronze. The bronze persists, but the statue has ceased to exist.* Your example is a change of form, not substance.