There is,
among contemporary Thomists, a controversy over the metaphysical status of
human beings after death. Both sides
agree that the human soul is the substantial form of the living human body,
both sides agree that the human soul subsists after death, and both sides agree
that the body is restored to the soul at the resurrection. But what happens to the human being himself between death and
resurrection? Does a human being in some
way continue to exist after death? Or
does he cease to exist until the resurrection?
Which answer do the premises that both sides agreed on support? And which answer did Aquinas himself support?
"One of the best contemporary writers on philosophy" National Review
"A terrific writer" Damian Thompson, Daily Telegraph
"Feser... has the rare and enviable gift of making philosophical argument compulsively readable" Sir Anthony Kenny, Times Literary Supplement
Selected for the First Things list of the 50 Best Blogs of 2010 (November 19, 2010)
Saturday, March 26, 2016
Friday, March 18, 2016
Brentano on the mental
What
distinguishes the mental from the non-mental?
Franz Brentano (1838-1917), in Psychology
from an Empirical Standpoint, famously takes intentionality to be the key.
He developed this answer by way of criticism of (what he took to be) the
traditional Cartesian criterion.
Descartes held that the essence of matter lies in extension and spatial
location. Whatever lacks these geometrical
features is therefore non-material.
Accordingly, it must fall into the second class of substances recognized
by Descartes, namely mental substance.
As Brentano reads the Cartesian tradition, then, it holds that the
essence of the mental is to be unextended and non-spatial.
Tuesday, March 15, 2016
Oderberg on final causes
Speaking of
teleology: David Oderberg’s article “Finality
Revived: Powers and Intentionality” has just appeared in Synthese. It seems at the moment to be available for
free viewing online, so take a look. Readers
interested in final causality and its relationship to the current debate in
analytic metaphysics about the purported “physical intentionality” of causal powers
will definitely find it of interest.
Saturday, March 12, 2016
Parsons on Coyne
Readers of my
recent First Things review of
Jerry Coyne’s Faith versus Fact might
find of interest atheist philosopher Keith Parsons’ comments on the review in the Letters pages of
the latest issue of First Things. My reply to Keith can also be found there.
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
Conjuring teleology
At
The Philosophers’ Magazine online,
Massimo Pigliucci discusses teleology and teleonomy. His position has the virtues of being simple
and clear. Unfortunately, it also has
the vices of being simplistic and wrong.
His remarks can be summarized fairly briefly. Explaining what is wrong with them takes a
little more doing.
Thursday, March 3, 2016
Putting nature on the rack
What was it
that distinguished the modern scientific method inaugurated by Bacon, Galileo,
Descartes, and Co. from the science of the medievals? One common answer is that the moderns
required empirical evidence, whereas the medievals contented themselves with
appeals to the authority of Aristotle.
The famous story about Galileo’s Scholastic critics’ refusing to look
through his telescope is supposed to illustrate this difference in attitudes.
The problem
with this answer, of course, is that it is false. For one thing, the telescope story is (like so many other things
everyone “knows” about the Scholastics and about the
Galileo affair) a
legend. For another, part of the
reason Galileo’s position was resisted was precisely because there were a
number of respects in which it
appeared to conflict with the empirical evidence. (For example, the Copernican theory predicted
that Venus should sometimes appear six times larger than it does at other
times, but at first the empirical evidence seemed not to confirm this, until
telescopes were developed which could detect the difference; the predicted
stellar parallax did not receive empirical confirmation for a long time; and so
forth.)
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Scott Ryan RIP
Longtime
readers who frequent the comboxes of this blog will be familiar with Scott Ryan, who
for many years was a regular commenter here.
He was also a moderator and regular commenter at the Classical Theism,
Philosophy, and Religion Forum. I
was very sorry to learn that Scott died last week, apparently of a burst
stomach ulcer. I did not know Scott
personally, but I always greatly valued his contributions to combox discussions,
which consistently manifested Scott’s high intelligence, breadth of knowledge,
sense of humor, clarity of expression, and charity toward others. The exchanges on this blog have been of a consistently
high quality in large part because of Scott’s presence. (My recent book Neo-Scholastic Essays was dedicated to my readers. Scott had become such a presence in the comboxes
that when I wrote that dedication, and when I have thought about it in the
months since, Scott’s would be the first name and face that would come to my
mind.)
Recently
Scott began the process of converting to Catholicism. While
reading through some of his recent posts at the Forum the other day, I came
across this
exchange. It is especially poignant in
light of Scott’s death, and that, together with the beauty, simplicity, and
tranquility of the sentiments Scott expressed, brought tears to my eyes.
Many readers
have been making their feelings about Scott known in the
combox of an earlier post. It is
clear that they will miss him as much as I will. Our prayers are with you Scott, and with your
family. RIP.