Posted by ficino 11/28/2017 7:03 am | #61 |
bmiller wrote:
@ficino,
Regarding intentio.
This may interest you.
Thanks. I had seen Brigg's blog a year or so ago and forgot about it.
Every day I read some of the SCG. I'm almost up to book III, so I'll be into the part on providence soon. It would be helpful if Mr. Briggs were to supply the citations of the passages on which he comments, post by post.
I see arguments in the comboxes there that pretty much replicate what is argued in comboxes over on Feser's blog, here, and other places. Some people say A-T accounts of motion and change are all wrong and others say A-T is correct and denials are all wrong. Great fun.
I just deleted my post where I was ruminating about the natural motion of the simple bodies in Aristotle, because I didn't think my ruminations went anywhere. You preserved the last part of that post, which is fine.
In your previous comment, you quoted ST I q. 8 a. 1. There Aquinas appeals to Ari Phys VII as support for the premise that an agent is present to the patient. I don't agree that at this spot in the ST, Aquinas is conflating sustenance of existence with causation of motion. The appearance of such conflation is what I said earlier I don't like about Feser's discussions of the First Way. He seems to start from an argument from motion and end up saying that things need to be sustained in existence by a being that exists necessarily. Clearly, if something moves, it must exist, but it's not obvious from its motion that it needs something else to actualize its existence at every moment.
I agree that Aquinas argues that God sustains each thing. I agree that Aquinas is not obligated to construe Aristotle as Aristotle might have wanted his works to be construed. I don't agree that the First Way addresses existential inertia. Aquinas tackles that elsewhere.
If Feser or others want to make the motion argument a step in a sustainer argument, I think they need to lay out all those steps. True, Feser's Aristotelian proof in his recent book moves from premises about motion to claims about existence. E.g. p. 28: " ... linear series of changes are less fundamental than the hierarchical sort of series. For things can change only because they exist--the coffee, for example, cannot grow cold unless it exists--and for a thing to exist at any particular moment requires that it be actualized at that moment" etc. Whoa, where's this 'existence must be actualized by something else at every moment' stuff coming from?
It's Thomistic to say that a contingent thing's existence must be actualized by God at every moment it exists. That doctrine, however, is not a premise in the First Way or in other motion arguments for God's existence that I've seen. If you have other passages in mind, I'd like to see them. In what you quoted earlier from SCG I.13.8, there is no term that signifies "sustaining." Generante does not supply this.
So I think it's bad strategy to start a Sustainer argument for God from a Motion argument for God. I understand that the motion part is appealing because it starts with what we observe, i.e. things change. But refutation of existential inertia isn't a conclusion that follows from premises required for an A-T account of the motion. Auxiliary premises about actualizing a thing's continued existence have to be brought in. I think the project would be stronger if the motion argument, or the motion part of a sustainer argument, were simply dropped and the necessary/contingent argument were made the focus. I'm not endorsing that argument, heh heh, but I think it carries less baggage.
Last edited by ficino (11/28/2017 7:15 am)
Posted by StardustyPsyche 11/28/2017 10:29 am | #62 |
@ficino
"I see arguments in the comboxes there that pretty much replicate what is argued in comboxes over on Feser's blog, here, and other places"
--Indeed, the pattern is much the same. I lay out a carefully reasoned and easy to follow set of arguments such as in #7 and #8 on this thread. In response good Christians call me a troll and various other names, make a few vague allusions, and that's all.
No theist, certainly not Feser, has displayed any capacity to form a valid and otherwise sound argument to demonstrate, on the merits, using sound logical reasoning, where #7 and #8 fail.
Jeremy is correct, ficino, no need to worry about your level of physics. Just apply basic modern physics and you can quickly locate the flaws in the First Way and the Second Way.
" I don't agree that the First Way addresses existential inertia"
--Right, that is attempted in the Second Way, which I show to be erroneous in #8 on this thread.
"Whoa, where's this 'existence must be actualized by something else at every moment' stuff coming from?"
--You are obviously a troll for even asking such a question :-)
"But refutation of existential inertia isn't a conclusion that follows from premises required for an A-T account of the motion."
--Right, that is covered in the Second Way. I like this translation, if you have a better one please send me the link.
http://iteadthomam.blogspot.com/2011/03/second-way-in-syllogistic-format.html
I invite you to read the text found at that link, or any preferred translation, then read #8 on this thread. If you can point out any errors or weaknesses in my argument you would be doing me a much appreciated favor.
Posted by FZM 11/28/2017 11:28 am | #63 |
ficino wrote:
I don't agree that at this spot in the ST, Aquinas is conflating sustenance of existence with causation of motion. The appearance of such conflation is what I said earlier I don't like about Feser's discussions of the First Way. He seems to start from an argument from motion and end up saying that things need to be sustained in existence by a being that exists necessarily. Clearly, if something moves, it must exist, but it's not obvious from its motion that it needs something else to actualize its existence at every moment.
This may happen because Feser reads motion as meaning change in a very general sense and understands change as being the actualisation of potency. Then 'motion' becomes something very wide ranging.
Posted by ficino 11/28/2017 12:40 pm | #64 |
FZM wrote:
This may happen because Feser reads motion as meaning change in a very general sense and understands change as being the actualisation of potency. Then 'motion' becomes something very wide ranging.
Hello FZM, participants in this thread so far seem to be agreed that in A-T accounts, change or "motion" comprises locomotion, alteration and growth/decay. I think all are agreed that generation and destruction are not "motions" in A-T, though as I said earlier, Ari includes those two in lists of motions in some earlier writings.
So you are right that motion is broader then mere change of location. But there is no A-T warrant to expand "motion" so widely that it encompasses continuation in existence. Feser believes that abstract objects exist, for example, but they are not in motion. God's sustaining of something in being is not as such an instance of the thing's motion unless every actualisation of a potency is a motion. But that seems not to be the case. It would be an excluded middle fallacy to say that because motion and existence are actualizations of a potency, therefore motion is equivalent to existence.
-------------------------------------
Adding: In his commentary on Aristotle's Physics, Aquinas distinguishes between Aristotle's discussions of motion in a strict sense in Book V and later, where Ari limits motion to locomotion, alteration and growth/decay, and Ari's use of a more common sense of "motion" in Book III, where Ari speaks of it as an alternative of "change/mutation," as though it can include generation and corruption (In Phys. III l. 2, C286). In other places in Aquinas' commentary, where Aristotle restricts motion to the three above species, Aquinas notes those three as motion in the strict sense. John Wippel,
The Metaphysical Thought of Thomas Aquinas (Cath U Press 2000), 445-6 wonders whether Aquinas uses the term "motion" in this broad sense in the First Way, so as to include generation and corruption. Wippel comes down to this: "I am inclined to limit motion as it appears as the starting point of the first way to some form of motion taken strictly, but to suggest that in the course of justifying the principle of motion -- whatever is moved is moved by something else -- Thomas uses motion broadly enough to apply to any reduction from potentiality to actuality." Wippel thinks Aquinas may have allowed a similar, broader understanding of motion in SCG I.13. Then Wippel concludes, "Nonetheless, the starting point for both of these arguments appears to be motion taken strictly and, to be specific, local motion. Perhaps it is because the first way in the Summa theologiae begins with readily observable phenomena--local motion and alteration--that Thomas describes it as the 'more manifest way'."
I believe Wippel's conclusion is correct. 1) In SCG I.13, Aquinas refers expressly and often in those arguments to Books VII and VIII of the Physics. By the time Aristotle wrote the second half of the Physics, he had excluded generation and corruption from motions. It's that second half of the Physics that Aquinas applies in his proofs from motion.
2) The A-T presentation of motion gives it a telos, an end. If the substance passes out of existence, it is not in entelechy, fulfillment, which is supposed to be the state that a thing attains when it attains an end.
Last edited by ficino (11/28/2017 2:55 pm)
Posted by ficino 11/28/2017 12:54 pm | #65 |
StardustyPsyche wrote:
I invite you to read the text found at that link, or any preferred translation, then read #8 on this thread. If you can point out any errors or weaknesses in my argument you would be doing me a much appreciated favor.
I am sorry that I can't do justice right now to the efforts you've made in your #8. I've read it a couple of times, and so far it seems more directed against the Third Way or the argument in the DEE than against the Second Way. That's because the Second Way focuses on hierarchical series of causes, but as I understand your #8, you mainly look at the question, whether something that exists will pop out of existence w/o a divine sustainer. I think you are right to point out that Aquinas comes close to occasionalism and/or creatio continua, though I haven't worked through those problems enough to have a view on whether he successfully avoids them.
I will make any further suggestions if I have any to make later on.
Posted by bmiller 11/28/2017 3:07 pm | #66 |
@ficino,
If Feser or others want to make the motion argument a step in a sustainer argument, I think they need to lay out all those steps.
You are right that a "sustainer" is not mentioned in the premises of the First Way. But neither are a lot of other AT background concepts that are baked in since it is a short summary rather than a book. In particular for the case of existing material things, the same agent causes the particular combination of form/matter to come into existence (cause in fieri) but also causes it to remain in existence (cause in esse). I suspect that Dr Feser has given enough lectures to gauge the appropriate amount of detail to supply in a short popular talk to get the point across without losing (too much) of his audience. After all, his book "Aquinas" was subtitled "A Beginner's Guide".
He has however gone into the details and arguments for the differences between cause in fieri and cause in esse at his blog site.
Hello FZM, participants in this thread so far seem to be agreed that in A-T accounts, change or "motion" comprises locomotion, alteration and growth/decay. I think all are agreed that generation and destruction are not "motions" in A-T, though as I said earlier, Ari includes those two in lists of motions in some earlier writings.
I don't think is worded quite right. AT lists generation and destruction as real *change*. It's just that these cannot be predicated of existing material objects (since they do not exist). So when the discussion is about the change of an existing material object, the term *motion* is used for changes to that thing that allow it to remain as the same entity.
FZM is correct though that "actualisation of potency" applies to both types of change.
Posted by ficino 11/28/2017 3:28 pm | #67 |
bmiller wrote:
@ficino,
If Feser or others want to make the motion argument a step in a sustainer argument, I think they need to lay out all those steps.
He has however gone into the details and arguments for the differences between cause in fieri and cause in esse at his blog site.
It would be great if you could provide links or the like. Right now I'm reading Feser's 2013 paper, "Motion in Aristotle, Newton and Einstein." I'm not at all happy about how he suggests (p. 238) that generation and corruption count as kinesis in a broader sense in Aristotle, since Ari expressly denies that they are kineseis in his later writings, starting from Physics V.2, 225b10. But I reserve judgment until I've finished Feser's article. On the point, see what I quoted from Wippel.
Hello FZM, participants in this thread so far seem to be agreed that in A-T accounts, change or "motion" comprises locomotion, alteration and growth/decay. I think all are agreed that generation and destruction are not "motions" in A-T, though as I said earlier, Ari includes those two in lists of motions in some earlier writings.
I don't think is worded quite right. AT lists generation and destruction as real *change*.
Yes, here we're bumping into the range of meaning of the English "change." In what you bolded, I was referring to kinesis as "change or 'motion'." I agree that generation and destruction are changes - metabolai or mutationes.
Posted by Calhoun 11/28/2017 5:44 pm | #68 |
Right now I'm reading Feser's 2013 paper, "Motion in Aristotle, Newton and Einstein." I'm not at all happy about how he suggests (p. 238) that generation and corruption count as kinesis in a broader sense in Aristotle, since Ari expressly denies that they are kineseis in his later writings, starting from Physics V.2, 225b10. But I reserve judgment until I've finished Feser's article. On the point, see what I quoted from Wippel.
Can you elaborate on that point more? thus far You have only said that its because the subject does not persist through generation/corruption. But its obviously false that something needs to always and necessarily persist for it to count as Change. Your Quote from Wippel hardly seems illuminating here , there so much back and forth about what he is inclined to think, what appears to him and what STA's overall metaphysic allows, There doesn't seem to be anything of importance we should be taking on board here.
And can you specify which version of Feser's article you're reading because I've never seen the word kinesis used by him. So I don't really see your point.
In what you bolded, I was referring to kinesis as "change or 'motion'." I agree that generation and destruction are changes - metabolai or mutationes.
The most important point in bmiller's post was that "actualisation of potency" applies to both types of change, whether you want to make distinctions between them isn't relevant.
Posted by Jeremy Taylor 11/28/2017 7:05 pm | #69 |
In generation and corruption there is still a substrate that persists through change.
Posted by ficino 11/28/2017 9:24 pm | #70 |
Jeremy Taylor wrote:
In generation and corruption there is still a substrate that persists through change.
I said that the substance does not persist through corruption, and no preceding substance persists through generation. Aristotle opens up Physics V.2 with a second reason why generation/corruption are not motions: "In respect of substance there is no motion, because substance has no contrary among things that are." What is the substrate you are talking about as persisting through gen/corr, and what is its relevance to the question, whether premises about motion are sufficient for refuting existential inertia?
Last edited by ficino (11/28/2017 9:24 pm)