The Sonum Bonum

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“Sona” is more correctly associated with “mime image” or “like pattern”. “Son”, “Persona”, “Person”, “personification”, and so on, all come from the general idea of “sona” being a replicated image or pattern of something. Thus “sonum bonum” would mean “the image of good” or “the standard of good”, whereas “summum bonum” would mean the “summit of good”.
 
Hmm…

God gives purpose to creation. God defines and determines what “good” actually means. And how do we know when something is good? When it is what God wants, when it serves God’s purpose.
Thank you for the clarification. Yes, God does define and determine what good is, but it’s not that simple because, just like JP2Admirer said, God is the good. God does define the good, but not in the same way that a teacher defines an algebraic term. God and the good are not two separate entities. They are one.
But then who is God? God is the perfect good. That which determines what “perfect good” means, is the perfect good.
God == the Perfect Good, and
The Perfect Good == God
How is that different than saying;
Reality == All that exists
All that exists == Reality
You are right here.
If you ask someone what it means to exist, they are likely to say, “Something exists if it is real.” And if you ask them, “How do you know if something is real”, they are likely to say, “If something exists, it is real.” So what have they actually told you? Nothing other than the words “real” and “existing” mean the same thing, *whatever *that is.
What they are missing in their answers is any concept that relates their defined words to what doesn’t exist or isn’t real. I offered to resolve that problem by the simple rational declaration that “what is real or exists is what has affect.” This is an issue of rationality and thus purpose and good. The word “affect” has a significant meaning different than merely the words “real” and “exists”. The word “affect” means that something changes. So what I have said is that what exists is what changes something in some way, else it does not exist. You can know what exists by knowing whether it changes anything. You can know if something does not exist, if it does not change anything. How you might know if it changes anything is a separate issue.
So applying that concern to the proposed definition of God, “The Perfect Good”, we have to understand what it means to not be God or not be good with a concept *different *than merely “God” or “good”.
I understand now.
One has proposed that **happiness **is the issue, but that concept is subjective and God isn’t something we think of as subjective. Another proposal was that **purpose **is the concept. If something meets its innate purpose, then it is good and if not then it is not good. But again, we have an issue of subjectivity, “Who’s purpose?” If we say “God’s purpose”, then we have merely become circular again, “God is the good that gives purpose which is defined by whatever good God gives.” Again, it becomes meaningless.
But is happiness really subjective? I can understand if you interpret it as a feeling. But what if happiness is not only a feeling? What if it’s something like “beatitude”?

Also with purpose. Is purpose really subjective? Is the purpose of a car really anything anyone wants it to be?
The concept of an absolute, non-subjective, good or purpose helps, but how do we support the idea that there actually is an innate absolute good or purpose? My people can answer that, but I don’t think that yours can. :o
How would you answer it?
 
Image of God,

I didn’t mean to insult you by correcting you, so I hope you didn’t take it that way. Heaven knows my Latin isn’t that great.

“Sonum” is the accusative singular of “sonus” which means, “sound.” So the play on words was that “sonum bonum” literally means, “good sound.”

I’d be interested to see where you encountered “sonum bonum” as you’ve now got me wondering?
No, I did not think you insulted me. I was just confused on whether it actually sounded good or you were playing on the words (I thought it did anyway:D).

Anyways, here are some places I found it:
makepeoplethink.blogspot.com/

thestudentroom.co.uk/wiki/Revision:OCR_Religious_Studies_Synoptic_Paper
In this second link, scroll down to the section “RELATIONS BETWEEN MORAL BEHAVIOUR AND LIFE AFTER DEATH” and read next to Kant. There you will see it.

aishdas.org/asp/2005/03/life-and-consciousness.shtml
In this page, the word is in the 3rd to last paragraph.

Just to be sure, I don’t follow these websites, nor do I agree with everything they say. However, these are places where I have seen “sonum bonum” in some relation to the ultimate good.
 
As properly defining words with their concepts has been my ONLY issue, I find that part of your post as the only relevant part. But I don’t see much support for an “objective good”.

You say that because it is my nature to desire things and that list of things is infinite (which it isn’t), I should somehow accept that to mean that there must be an objective good. Frankly, I don’t see any relation.

In addition, “the source of all existence” doesn’t seem particularly lulling or appealing to me as a goal or “object” of desire. What is attractive about “the source of all existence”? Do you find women pining and longing for such? And what would that really have to do with an “objective good”? It seems to me that it would be merely a given and not particularly interesting other than in an intellectual way.

??
Yet, nonetheless, you always want something that is good (or at least appears that way). It is impossible for people to desire evil for its own sake. If you desire a brunette, you want her because you think she is good or will provide some good to you. That is what I think JP2Admirer means when he says that good is desirable. What is evil to you will never be desirable. I think this is an objective fact. If you can dispute it, give me an example of someone who wants something that they do not think to be desirable (good). As St. Thomas Aquinas says “Everything is good so far as it is desirable”. But do we really desire anything? Or are there certain things it was we desire that we are really desiring?

Are you so sure that your desires are not infinite? I cannot assure you that you have not ceased wanting since you reached the age of reason. Yet even after you got what you wanted, you wanted more still. Can you honestly say that there is one person on this Earth that does not want to be completely satisfied? Can you say that about yourself?
 
“Sona” is more correctly associated with “mime image” or “like pattern”. “Son”, “Persona”, “Person”, “personification”, and so on, all come from the general idea of “sona” being a replicated image or pattern of something. Thus “sonum bonum” would mean “the image of good” or “the standard of good”, whereas “summum bonum” would mean the “summit of good”.
They are really close meanings.

By the way, your Latin is truly “sona” (sound). 😉
 
Yet, nonetheless, you always want something that is good (or at least appears that way). It is impossible for people to desire evil for its own sake. If you desire a brunette, you want her because you think she is good or will provide some good to you. That is what I think JP2Admirer means when he says that good is desirable. What is evil to you will never be desirable. I think this is an objective fact. If you can dispute it, give me an example of someone who wants something that they do not think to be desirable (good). As St. Thomas Aquinas says “Everything is good so far as it is desirable”. **But do we really desire anything? Or are there certain things it was we desire that we are really desiring? **

Are you so sure that your desires are not infinite? I cannot assure you that you have not ceased wanting since you reached the age of reason. Yet even after you got what you wanted, you wanted more still. Can you honestly say that there is one person on this Earth that does not want to be completely satisfied? Can you say that about yourself?
I made a few mistakes in this post. The first bolded should be “But do we really desire just anything? Or are there certain principles in what we desire that we are really desiring?” The second bolded “cannot” should be “can”.
 
You say that because it is my nature to desire things and that list of things is infinite (which it isn’t), I should somehow accept that to mean that there must be an objective good. Frankly, I don’t see any relation.

In addition, “the source of all existence” doesn’t seem particularly lulling or appealing to me as a goal or “object” of desire.
??
The medievals used to say that “nature does nothing in vain.” There indeed may be no relation between seeking an objective good and one actually existing. Nonetheless, I choose to accept that there is an objective good based on other deliberations (i.e. Aquinas’ five ways). (Also, when I say ‘objective good’ I do not mean there is one law or way to act in all ethical situations, I simply mean there is an object that is the satisfaction of every desire; there is perfection.)

As to “the source of all existence” not being appealing, you are forcing me to rehash all my Thomas metaphysics studies.:confused: Aquinas describes things with essences as “quasi habens esse” as if a possesor of being, and God as “esse subsistens”). God, then is the act of every creature, who by the way have their own natures which distinguishes them from God. Now God as being the act and existence of all things and the perfection of all things, is then the fullness of being of all things.

Think of that beautiful brunette, and all that is beautiful about her is because of God; think of an ocean sunset and all that is beautiful about it is because of God; think of looking into the eyes of your spouse, and all that is beautiful about it is because of God; think of the lion roaming on the prairie, and God is the act of that thing; think of mountains, of strange sea monsters, of insects, of children sleeping, etc. Now “esse formale” is the intelligible heart of “esse subsistens” from which arises everything that is good and beautiful. All that is arises from the depths of being. That should lull the appetite. Just think of looking (I am speaking analogically, of course) at all that exists with one glimpse of your eye – that should lull the appetite.

Behind Aquinas’ dusty language is a mind on fire, and his metaphysics opened my eyes to the poetry that is existence. Everything teams with life, with being, and shouts to us “look at me and WHAT I AM.” Nonetheless, I am treading very lightly here, and I would suggest reading some neo-Thomists description of metaphysics. I suggest John Knasas’ book *Being and Some Twentieth Century Thomists *for starters.
 
But is happiness really subjective? I can understand if you interpret it as a feeling. But what if happiness is not only a feeling? What if it’s something like “beatitude”?
Even with the existence of a objective good, happiness must always be subjective. The “good” is what brings the happiness, it is not the happiness itself.
Also with purpose. Is purpose really subjective? Is the purpose of a car really anything anyone wants it to be?
Again, a purpose must always be subjective even if with objective supreme good. To have a goal, there must be a pursuer. The purpose of something is to assist the pursuer in reaching his goal. Even if everyone’s goal is the same, the “purpose” of anything is still determined by the fact that it serves a pursuer, the subject, and thus is actually subjective regardless of the existence of an objective good.
How would you answer it?
There is still far too much distance between the understanding and the faith to attempt that one. :o
Yet, nonetheless, you always want something that is good (or at least appears that way). It is impossible for people to desire evil for its own sake.
That is merely due to the way the words are defined. “Good” MEANS “something desired” in this context. The question is whether a “thing” can be desirable regardless of any subject. The implication of an objective good is that all people would desire it regardless of their opinions or feelings on the matter. That would seem, certainly to the atheist as an irrational proposition.
Are you so sure that your desires are not infinite? I cannot assure you that you have not ceased wanting since you reached the age of reason. Yet even after you got what you wanted, you wanted more still. Can you honestly say that there is one person on this Earth that does not want to be completely satisfied? Can you say that about yourself?
I only want for one thing and in obtaining that one thing, I would be completely satisfied, yet still living. :o
 
Even with the existence of a objective good, happiness must always be subjective. The “good” is what brings the happiness, it is not the happiness itself.
Nonetheless, happiness is good. What exactly brings happiness* might* be subjective, but happiness itself is not a subjective matter, otherwise how could I know what you’re talking about when you refer to it. It must be objective.
Again, a purpose must always be subjective even if with objective supreme good. To have a goal, there must be a pursuer. The purpose of something is to assist the pursuer in reaching his goal. Even if everyone’s goal is the same, the “purpose” of anything is still determined by the fact that it serves a pursuer, the subject, and thus is actually subjective regardless of the existence of an objective good.
Is the purpose (or the purposes) subject to the wants of the pursuer? A purpose is integral to a thing. I would argue that purpose is intimately tied to a thing’s essence and being. Unless the pursuer can essentially change the thing, I think the purpose(s) that a thing exists for does not change. If purpose is merely subjective then the misuse and abuse of things becomes impossible because misuse and abuse are merely subjective concepts. Everything becomes relative and no ethical system can exist solidly. It could then be said that authority cannot be abused because its purpose is whatever the person wielding it wants it to be. Of course, there is one thing we know: If all things are relative, then at least one thing isn’t.
There is still far too much distance between the understanding and the faith to attempt that one. :o
Of what kind?
That is merely due to the way the words are defined. “Good” MEANS “something desired” in this context. The question is whether a “thing” can be desirable regardless of any subject. The implication of an objective good is that all people would desire it regardless of their opinions or feelings on the matter. That would seem, certainly to the atheist as an irrational proposition.
Is it? We desire a lot of things, we get them, and we still desire more. We desire because we want to possess something. Yet we never possess what we want because if we did we would stop desiring. Therefore, it seems completely rational to propose an objective good that would fulfill all our desires. After all, every human has something in common: there desires are never fulfilled.

As St. Augustine said: “O Lord, our hearts are restless until they rest in thee.” Every heart is restless. Desire and restlessness is part of everything we do. It makes sense that if there is nothing in this world that will completely satisfy anyone, there is something that will everyone.
I only want for one thing and in obtaining that one thing, I would be completely satisfied, yet still living. :o
I don’t understand this statement. You don’t have to be dead to be completely satisfied. Action is the desire for the Summum Bonum; contemplation is the possession of it. When you obtain that one thing your contemplation and action will be one.
 
Nonetheless, happiness is good. What exactly brings happiness* might* be subjective, but happiness itself is not a subjective matter, otherwise how could I know what you’re talking about when you refer to it. It must be objective.
The word and concept of happiness is certainly objective. that is not in dispute by anyone (save perhaps the solipsist who argues with anything). but the concept of a unicorn is also objective, but that has nothing to do with the objectivity of the unicorn itself.
A purpose is integral to a thing. I would argue that purpose is intimately tied to a thing’s essence and being.
But that is what you are trying to establish. Merely stating it doesn’t mean anything. How do you support that notion?
Unless the pursuer can essentially change the thing, I think the purpose(s) that a thing exists for does not change.
I recently allowed a homeless woman to live out of my car. Is that the purpose of cars? It was my purpose for that period. What the auto manufacturer built the car for, is another issue. He built to make money by trading it. Is that the purpose for cars? The person who actually put the pieces together had another purpose. The car served his need for a job. Is that the purpose for cars? The list could on endlessly. The idea is that an automobile was intended to serve a particular purpose in general for its owner. But to declare that such a purpose is THE purpose is like declaring that all REAL men are exactly 6 feet tall with brown hair and white skin. The general truth has little to do with the real truth and is certainly not a “superior” concept merely due to being more general.
If purpose is merely subjective then the misuse and abuse of things becomes impossible because misuse and abuse are merely subjective concepts. Everything becomes relative and no ethical system can exist solidly. It could then be said that authority cannot be abused because its purpose is whatever the person wielding it wants it to be.
Then it is important to get the understanding and proof of objective good down and published, huh. Stating that it is real does nothing.
Is it? We desire a lot of things, we get them, and we still desire more.
“Who’s ‘we’, Paleface?” 😉

I am only interested in one.
Action is the desire for the Summum Bonum; *contemplation is the possession of it. *When you obtain that one thing your contemplation and action will be one.
That would be the one. 😃

But I don’t understand your statement that contemplation is the possession of it…? :confused:
 
The word and concept of happiness is certainly objective. that is not in dispute by anyone (save perhaps the solipsist who argues with anything). but the concept of a unicorn is also objective, but that has nothing to do with the objectivity of the unicorn itself.
The unicorn is only a concept. There’s nothing else to it. It does not exist and is therefore is not objective, but the concept does.
But that is what you are trying to establish. Merely stating it doesn’t mean anything. How do you support that notion?
A car from the beginning of its existence has set purposes. If the purpose changes, then the car itself must change. The purpose is not subject to the owner, but is integral to the car. If it were not then the owner would always use the car the right way. We know that’s not the case however.
I recently allowed a homeless woman to live out of my car. Is that the purpose of cars? It was my purpose for that period. What the auto manufacturer built the car for, is another issue. He built to make money by trading it. Is that the purpose for cars? The person who actually put the pieces together had another purpose. The car served his need for a job. Is that the purpose for cars? The list could on endlessly. The idea is that an automobile was intended to serve a particular purpose in general for its owner. But to declare that such a purpose is THE purpose is like declaring that all REAL men are exactly 6 feet tall with brown hair and white skin. The general truth has little to do with the real truth and is certainly not a “superior” concept merely due to being more general.
I didn’t say that a car had only one purpose. It could have more than one. But those purposes are not infinite. Otherwise, misuse becomes impossible. How do I know that I’m not supposed to eat a computer keyboard for lunch? Would you agree that to eat a computer keyboard is an abuse? A violation of its purpose? If that homeless woman had decided to jump on your car like a trampoline; you would see nothing wrong with that? There’s nothing wrong with taking Tylenol because it’s fun to eat?
Then it is important to get the understanding and proof of objective good down and published, huh. Stating that it is real does nothing.
I stated that something is good when it fulfills its purpose. I stated also that purpose is essential to a thing. It does not change from person to person. But I’m asking you about misuse. If purpose is simply subjective then nothing could every misused. Do you agree that nothing can be misused? I think this is a difficult question you have to answer if you wish to propose your argument.
“Who’s ‘we’, Paleface?” 😉
We is merely inclusive first person.😉
But I don’t understand your statement that contemplation is the possession of it…? :confused:
Contemplation is like holding something in the hands of your soul. It’s more than holding it with your bodily hands.
 
A car from the beginning of its existence has set purposes. If the purpose changes, then the car itself must change. The purpose is not subject to the owner, but is integral to the car. If it were not then the owner would always use the car the right way. We know that’s not the case however.
I think you will have a really hard time selling that one. Obviously You think in terms of “proper use”. But I think you are not seeing that such is not an innate quality, but rather an assigned and accepted pseudo-property, not that it shouldn’t be.
I didn’t say that a car had only one purpose. It could have more than one. But those purposes are not infinite. Otherwise, misuse becomes impossible. How do I know that I’m not supposed to eat a computer keyboard for lunch? Would you agree that to eat a computer keyboard is an abuse? A violation of its purpose? If that homeless woman had decided to jump on your car like a trampoline; you would see nothing wrong with that? There’s nothing wrong with taking Tylenol because it’s fun to eat?
I think you are conflating “misuse”, “abuse”, “harmful”, and “damage”. If a person truly owns a pencil, he can use that pencil to adjust the leg of his desk temporarily without “abusing the pencil” or even “misusing the pencil”. That is why we call it “owning” so as to make it clear that he can do with it as he sees fit within the boundaries of other laws.

A person “misuses” something when he tries to use it in a way that doesn’t accomplish as he intended. But that makes its “use/misuse” subjective.
Contemplation is like holding something in the hands of your soul. It’s more than holding it with your bodily hands.
But I hardly consider that being in “possession” of it. My first visit to Heaven was something I could never forget or leave undesired, but that doesn’t mean that I am in possession of what got me there nor any longer in possession of being there, yet contemplation of it has never left me since.
 
I think you will have a really hard time selling that one. Obviously You think in terms of “proper use”. But I think you are not seeing that such is not an innate quality, but rather an assigned and accepted pseudo-property, not that it shouldn’t be.
No, it is probably the idea above that will have trouble being sold. There will be difficulty getting rational people to believe that a car can be used for anything.
I think you are conflating “misuse”, “abuse”, “harmful”, and “damage”. If a person truly owns a pencil, he can use that pencil to adjust the leg of his desk temporarily without “abusing the pencil” or even “misusing the pencil”. That is why we call it “owning” so as to make it clear that he can do with it as he sees fit within the boundaries of other laws.
So you admit that there is a such thing as misuse?
A person “misuses” something when he tries to use it in a way that doesn’t accomplish as he intended. But that makes its “use/misuse” subjective.
This isn’t correct, because if it were subjective then he wouldn’t be really misusing it.
But I hardly consider that being in “possession” of it. My first visit to Heaven was something I could never forget or leave undesired, but that doesn’t mean that I am in possession of what got me there nor any longer in possession of being there, yet contemplation of it has never left me since.
I knew it would be difficult speaking of supernatural concepts to a logician. 🙂
 
No, it is probably the idea above that will have trouble being sold. There will be difficulty getting rational people to believe that a car can be used for anything.
Have you ever heard the expression, “Think out of the box”? You are expressing the exact impetus for that expression. I don’t need to sell the idea. It is already being sold throughout the world.

A child is raised with the concern of “what am I supposed to do?” But when maturing, they must convert that thought to “what needs to be done?” The difference is whether Man (parents) are assigning the use and purpose for things and you, or whether God is. God provides the purpose of things according to need. Man assigns purpose according to His owndesign and preference.

Mammon greatly prefers that all people use all things in exactly the manner that he assigns. In that way, Mammon can predict and thus control all Man. But God has no need to control people and thus no need to assign exact purposes for every little thing, but rather gives people their own need individually and as a group and lets them work out how to use whatever is available to meet that need. Mammon chooses to use people so as to accomplish his purpose, thus the word “usury” which doesn’t merely apply to money matters.

Mammon designs a box for everyone to think within so as to establish an order that he can handle and control. The expression, “think out of the box” is intended to challenge those attempting to control all life, those with domination aspirations.

But such doesn’t mean that there is no box at all just because Mammon has designed an artificial box. God has, in effect, designed a box too, but it is a very different box. Jesus spoke of the spirit being a higher priority than the laws. The laws represent the box of Mammon, whereas the Holy Spirit represents the “Box of God”. The spirit is a different box for what the purpose of anything really is and that purpose is not a fixed purpose such as a tree always being used for exactly of the things from this assigned list, as Mammon would have it, but rather the Holy Spirit’s assigned purpose for a tree is depended exactly on a person’s situation. It is a bigger box, but still a box.

The liberalist expresses that there is no box, “anything you want is the only purpose”, but that, as you know, is not the actual case. But it is a “spearhead” concept to help push Man out of his established box and toward the bigger box. It is an effort toward creativity. But if a person doesn’t stop his liberal direction within that bigger box and continues to be too free with his uses and purposes, he gets into a different kind of trouble, so there IS a box, just not so small and easily defined as Man would like.

The issue is not “all things have purpose” versus “nothing has purpose” nor is it “all things are objective” versus “all things are subjective”. It is an issue of the size and shape of the box that represents the God given rights, mind, and limits of freedom of the subject. There IS objective purpose, but it is not fixed in the way Man thinks, but only in the way God thinks, by the Holy Spirit and difficult for Man to grasp.
I knew it would be difficult speaking of supernatural concepts to a logician. 🙂
If there is only one logician on the planet to talk to about the supernatural, you would be talking to him. :o
 
Have you ever heard the expression, “Think out of the box”? You are expressing the exact impetus for that expression. I don’t need to sell the idea. It is already being sold throughout the world.

A child is raised with the concern of “what am I supposed to do?” But when maturing, they must convert that thought to “what needs to be done?” The difference is whether Man (parents) are assigning the use and purpose for things and you, or whether God is. God provides the purpose of things according to need. Man assigns purpose according to His owndesign and preference.

Mammon greatly prefers that all people use all things in exactly the manner that he assigns. In that way, Mammon can predict and thus control all Man. But God has no need to control people and thus no need to assign exact purposes for every little thing, but rather gives people their own need individually and as a group and lets them work out how to use whatever is available to meet that need. Mammon chooses to use people so as to accomplish his purpose, thus the word “usury” which doesn’t merely apply to money matters.

Mammon designs a box for everyone to think within so as to establish an order that he can handle and control. The expression, “think out of the box” is intended to challenge those attempting to control all life, those with domination aspirations.

But such doesn’t mean that there is no box at all just because Mammon has designed an artificial box. God has, in effect, designed a box too, but it is a very different box. Jesus spoke of the spirit being a higher priority than the laws. The laws represent the box of Mammon, whereas the Holy Spirit represents the “Box of God”. The spirit is a different box for what the purpose of anything really is and that purpose is not a fixed purpose such as a tree always being used for exactly of the things from this assigned list, as Mammon would have it, but rather the Holy Spirit’s assigned purpose for a tree is depended exactly on a person’s situation. It is a bigger box, but still a box.

The liberalist expresses that there is no box, “anything you want is the only purpose”, but that, as you know, is not the actual case. But it is a “spearhead” concept to help push Man out of his established box and toward the bigger box. It is an effort toward creativity. But if a person doesn’t stop his liberal direction within that bigger box and continues to be too free with his uses and purposes, he gets into a different kind of trouble, so there IS a box, just not so small and easily defined as Man would like.

The issue is not “all things have purpose” versus “nothing has purpose” nor is it “all things are objective” versus “all things are subjective”. It is an issue of the size and shape of the box that represents the God given rights, mind, and limits of freedom of the subject. There IS objective purpose, but it is not fixed in the way Man thinks, but only in the way God thinks, by the Holy Spirit and difficult for Man to grasp.
I think our thoughts are more similar than we think. But I don’t entirely agree that intended purposes are made for control.
If there is only one logician on the planet to talk to about the supernatural, you would be talking to him. :o
True, some of the supernatural is logical. But a great much of it is intuitive. An even great scope is beyond the reach of the human intellect.
 
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