Q
Qoeleth
Guest
In Platonic and Patristic Medieval Christian theology, the human being was essentially understood as a soul temporarily in a body (the ‘resurrection of the body’ being understood to refer to a kind of ‘spiritual body’ [an apparent oxymoron], different in quality and nature to the physical body.)
Tertullian, of course, understood the soul as being a kind of ‘highly refined matter’- but that position does not seem to have continued in Christian thought.
In Post-Vatican II theology, it has become fashionable to assert that the human is not simply a soul ‘in’ a body, but a ‘body with a soul’, etc. It is a bit of a cliché to say this is a more ‘Biblical’ or ‘Hebrew’ conception of the human person- but frankly there is no real evidence of that (apart from people asserting it!). Another annoying cliché (revealing a total ignorance of Medieval and Patristic thought) which is found among many modern theology students is that the idea of a ‘soul inside a body’ originates with Descartes. (I must humbly request that no-one offer those clichés here, please, as I am interested in serious opinions.)
Now- the material part of a human body changes every few years. The body may be subject to catastrophic event (loss of limbs, or, less dramatically degeneration due to age), but the ‘identity’ of the soul continues. After we die, it is evident that the body (as such) is not immortal, but returns to the dust from whence it comes.
So- what is the human being?:
Maybe the Medieval and Patristic view of the person as a soul ‘inside’ a body (during one’s mortal life) is more satisfactory?
Thanks for responses.
Tertullian, of course, understood the soul as being a kind of ‘highly refined matter’- but that position does not seem to have continued in Christian thought.
In Post-Vatican II theology, it has become fashionable to assert that the human is not simply a soul ‘in’ a body, but a ‘body with a soul’, etc. It is a bit of a cliché to say this is a more ‘Biblical’ or ‘Hebrew’ conception of the human person- but frankly there is no real evidence of that (apart from people asserting it!). Another annoying cliché (revealing a total ignorance of Medieval and Patristic thought) which is found among many modern theology students is that the idea of a ‘soul inside a body’ originates with Descartes. (I must humbly request that no-one offer those clichés here, please, as I am interested in serious opinions.)
Now- the material part of a human body changes every few years. The body may be subject to catastrophic event (loss of limbs, or, less dramatically degeneration due to age), but the ‘identity’ of the soul continues. After we die, it is evident that the body (as such) is not immortal, but returns to the dust from whence it comes.
So- what is the human being?:
- A soul in a body;
- A body, which includes a cognitive mechanism or ‘Central Processing Unit’ (brain/soul) as one of its organs;
- An inseparable fusion of body and soul.
Maybe the Medieval and Patristic view of the person as a soul ‘inside’ a body (during one’s mortal life) is more satisfactory?
Thanks for responses.