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NowAgnostic
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Sure. There are actually two refutations.The primary reason why immaterial abstraction must exist for any abstraction to occur is that abstraction creates immaterial concepts. The intellect possesses immaterial concepts (and most atheists I’ve come across acknowledge this) and yet they hold on to the idea that material instruments can pull this off. I’ve never received an explanation how this isn’t absurd. Most of them just stop talking when I bring this up. Perhaps not this time though.
Your argument would work if there were no such thing as mind at all, if a material brain were the only reality. But no one says this, regardless of how the mind-brain relation is conceived. Even if mind and brain are two aspects of the same single ontological reality, then that reality has both a material and an immaterial aspect, and can therefore deal with immaterial concepts and abstractions in the “mind” part, yet not without some necessary physical correlate in the “brain”.
And what is a “concept” but a “classifier” anyway? “Tree” is a classifier. A machine could be taught to recognize trees. Ah, but you will say, computers don’t understand the “essence” of treeness. Well, guess what, neither do we! What is the essence of treeness? That which makes a tree a tree! All we can do is classify based on sensory information.
Neuroscientists and neuroimagers are quite a bit smarter than all that. Trust me.The naturalists, I would say, are finding “material mind in the gaps.” They don’t know how the brain works, certainly can’t explain abstraction at least, and sees something going on there and say “Uh, yeah, this is abstraction … yep, that’s what it is. No immaterial intellect necessary. Trust me.”
Aristotle and Aquinas argued that by necessity, no matter how the material brain works, is unable to abstract immaterial concepts. Naturalists try and disprove this by pointing to nebulous activity in the brain and say, “Nope, something’s going on here. You’re wrong.” Wha?
It goes farther if the specific claim is made that the intellect is intrinsically independent of brain. That’s what the issue is. They apparently concluded that because a material brain can’t abstract immaterial concepts that therefore all the brain could do would be to provide sensory information.Bide your time. If you’re right, the truth shall side with you. Until then, your bold claims will not be scientific claims.
OK, get ready to open the garbage can lid… with the caveat that the physical goings-on in the brain are also intrinisically to what the mind is doing.One has to show that all the physical goings-on in the brain is what is sufficient to abstract immaterial principles. Various neuroscientists claim that this will be done someday. If they are successful, then the Thomistic model is legitimately trashed.
Well not by your hermeneutic. Cartesians would say, “Thomists don’t know how the brain works, certainly can’t explain all there is to know about its relation to memory, but they see something going on in the hippocampus and say uh yeah, that’s memory, yep that’s what it is, no immaterial intellect necessary… We have shown by necessity memory must be immaterial… Thomists try and disprove this by pointing to nebulous activity in the brain and saying ‘Nope, something’s going on. You’re wrong.’”If I’m not mistaken (and maybe I am because I could be thinking of a different philosopher) Descartes said that memory was immaterial. Neuroscience has disproved this.
Denial ain’t just a river in Egypt.
Memory of concepts? How can a material brain store immaterial memories?No because Thomas always maintained that memory was material.
As said before, if memory, instinct, imagination, etc. can be proved to be powers of the brain, then Descartes is wrong. As far as I understand, these have been proven to be part of the brain (right?). And so Descartes is proven wrong.
But immaterial concepts are still immaterial. Hence, they are not in the brain.
Yes, because you’re assuming the same cleavage-like separation between “brain” and “mind” you deny the Cartesians to memory and imagination when it comes to concepts.Is this entirely unreasonable?