Man is a rational animal. On further reflection I don’t fully understand this.
- If the above is true, then how can a man be said to “act like an animal” or to pursue a happiness befitting only to animals (like sense pleasure)?
For a human being “to act like an animal” in no way denies that we are animals. The human body clearly is an animal: its processes are identical to those of the other animals (breathing, digestion, blood chemistry, etc.); our bodies also die like animals. The difference is that our bodies can hold a rational mind, and have certain adaptations to subserve that mind (large head, bipedal limbs, prehensile hands, etc.) Animal body + rational mind = rational animal.
If someone “acts like an animal” it simply means that their actions are driven by physical instinct (which comes with his or her body) rather than by the rational mind. To run from perceived danger; to become sexually attracted; to scratch itchy skin, or even to jerk one’s hand or toes from a hot surface is to “act like an animal,” and this repertoire is a valid part of our human nature.
In fact, the term “animal” means in Latin, “being with a soul”; soul being “anima” in Latin. So even philosophically, we are by definition animals since we have souls.
Sense pleasure can be “animal” but can also be uniquely human. “Animals” (ie, nonhuman species) do not pursue sense pleasure as we do. Despite dogs having far more powerful noses than human beings, dogs do not make or use fragrances. Despite butterflies seeing more colors than we, and birds having far sharper eyes, neither group of creatures has visual arts. Depite pretty much all critters having a sense of taste, no nonhuman species has culinary arts. Meeting physical need is universally animal; “sense pleasure” as a goal is for the most part human.
- If people are rational, and discursive thought is action, then every person acts. But action is something that even animals do. So then the nature of man is the same as the animal nature, but then, it wouldn’t be human nature at all?
Action, if understood as conscious movement via muscles and limbs (assuming the creature has limbs), is universally animal. What distinguishes “human” action is, again, the mediation of the rational mind. Reflex action, like jerking down your foot when your ankle is tapped or gasping for breath when receiving a faceful of cold water, is an animal response. Creative effort is a “human” action. What makes action human is not that we move our limbs, but that we use them to subserve the purposes of our rational minds.
Again, muscular action + rational (human) mind = rational (human) action.
Any answers to this?
Thanks!
ICXC NIKA