I've felt this discussion is lacking a Thomist to defend, or at least elaborate on, the argument. Perhaps you are such a Thomist? If so, you will be providing a useful service, as Thomists that have contributed to discussions in the past are absent here.
My question for the Thomist - be it you or somebody else - about the above sentence, is
"what does the sentence mean, beyond the everyday notion that 'I would not be surprised if this acorn became a tree', and if it does mean something more, can that thing be explained in a non-circular manner, ie without using synonyms for 'potential' like 'can', 'possible', 'may', 'might'. — andrewk
Just a classic stock example by Sachs: Take a blind man. It would be the case that a blind man does not have the potency to see anymore, while a man with his eyes closed does have the capacity to see, and in fact a capacity that is furthermore at rest. When the non-blind man opens his eyes, his potential to see is not removed, but is in an active process (Aristotle's word for entelecheia or being-at-work-staying-itself ). In this sense, what we are not talking about something that surprises us or not but something intrinsic to the blind man. — Marty
Basically it's not clear to me how anything else could come into existence if there weren't potential for them to exist in the first actualizer. — Andrew M
Agreed. So I reject the idea that the first actualizer has potential for its own existence which is why I've said that it necessarily exists. However it doesn't follow that it doesn't have potentials for the existence of other substances. — Andrew M
Would I be correct in guessing that Sachs ia an Aristotelian.Just a classic stock example by Sachs: Take a blind man. It would be the case that a blind man does not have the potency to see anymore, while a man with his eyes closed does have the capacity to see, and in fact a capacity that is furthermore at rest. When the non-blind man opens his eyes, his potential to see is not removed, but is in an active process (Aristotle's word for entelecheia or being-at-work-staying-itself ). In this sense, what we are not talking about something that surprises us or not but something intrinsic to the blind man. — Marty
The trouble is that this requires yet another Aristotelian leap of faith, to believe that the word totum means something exact and objective that can be used for reasoning. I wonder whether Aristotle would call a coral, which is a symbiosis between two different organisms, a totum. Or a hive of bees.When Aristotle speaks about organisms he'll basically appeal to them as acting as totums, as opposed to composites or artifacts. The totum, as opposed to a composite is basically an organism that is self-organizing, self-determining, and functions according to its whole which determine its parts. When we insert such an eye it isn't a part of that process, — Marty
It seems to me that to be an Aristotelian one has to make an act of faith that various undefined terms, like potential, essence, entelechia and eudaimonia (even though I quite like that last one), mean something objective and tangible and can be used in the course of logical reasoning. — andrewk
The consequence of that is that an Aristotelian argument (and hence also most Thomist arguments) are never going to be accepted by non-Aristotelians because they are not prepared to make that act of faith. — andrewk
I'm just pointing out that the arguments they see as so powerful mean nothing to somebody that is not prepared to take the Aristotelian Leap of Faith. — andrewk
The trouble is that this requires yet another Aristotelian leap of faith, to believe that the word totum means something exact and objective that can be used for reasoning. I wonder whether Aristotle would call a coral, which is a symbiosis between two different organisms, a totum. Or a hive of bees.
Sorry, but this is crap. The key point isn't consistency, but the fact that these terms originated through an effort to understand different aspects of reality. If you go back to the process, you will understand the genesis of the terms, and so you will understand that they make sense and refer to real aspects of the world.Aristotelian terms like "matter", "form", "potential", and "actual", are developed through volumes of consistent usage. The key point here is consistency. So as one reads the usage in different books of Aristotle, in different fields of study, the meaning of the terms starts to come through, from these various applications of the same terminology. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's a strawman. To understand the genesis of the term means exactly to understand the process through which Aristotle went to come up with the term.Attempting to understand "the genesis of the terms" is pointless if what one is interested in is the meaning which Aristotle gave the terms. Why would you look at all the different usage in the time around Aristotle, if what you are interested in what Aristotle meant by those words? Why would someone look at how you and various other people use a word if what they are interested in is what I mean when I use that word. So really, what you said is what is crap. — Metaphysician Undercover
I can agree with that. I have not read Aristotle's physics or metaphysics for the same reason that I have not read any astrology texts - because the evidence that has been presented to me about them indicates that the ideas therein are outdated and have no application other than to the understanding of what sorts of things people used to believe a long time ago.It is a matter of having an interest in something and having the commitment and perseverance to follow through and develop an understanding of that thing which interests you. — Metaphysician Undercover
You might inquire as to how creation ex nihilo is possible, but I don't think that is the point of Feser's argument. — Aaron R
I just purchased Feser's book and have started reading the chapter in question. Interested to see where this goes. — Aaron R
But in this case the potentials belong to the other substances, not to the unactualized actualizer. If the unactualized actualizer, even if it were to exist necessarily, had potencies of its own then it wouldn't truly be an unactualized actualizer because its potencies would require actualization from something more fundamental. See also the above comments regarding conservation and creation. — Aaron R
Whether a definition makes sense is about whether one sees the reason for it, and how it might be used. That is different from the question of whether something is well-defined. In mathematics one frequently encounters definitions that one can see are well-defined, even though one has no idea (at first) of their motivation or use. It is the understanding of motivation and use that requires lots of reading and practice, not the determination of whether the definition is well-defined (non-nebulous).Definitions lots of times only make sense to those who have familiarised themselves with the subject of study or when supplemented with examples and other auxiliary comments. — Πετροκότσυφας
To understand the genesis of the term means exactly to understand the process through which Aristotle went to come up with the term. — Agustino
'Getting a sense of what Aristotle was getting at' from reading hundreds of pages can never substitute for a definition, because all those pages can contain is a finite number of examples of how he used a word, and examples - be they ever so many - are not a definition. — andrewk
Both quantum mechanics and general relativity could be fully defined and all the laws laid out in less than ten pages each, and a mathematically-literate reader could check that the definitions were well-defined, even if she had no idea what the purpose or applicability of any of it was. It's the purpose and applicability that accounts for the other few hundred pages of any relativity or QM text. — andrewk
If there are any that are not nebulous, it should be able to be presented here in a short post, just as with the definition that a Hilbert Space is a vector space over the real or complex numbers, equipped with an inner product, that is also a complete metric space. — andrewk
There is no ambiguity. You are misunderstanding what an interpretation of QM is. That's understandable, as the word is used differently there from how it is normally used.If there wasn't ambiguity as to what the applied terms really meant, there could not be multiple interpretations. — Metaphysician Undercover
say rather - 'from what one encounters in science or mathematics'. I am plenty used to encountering that form of argument around here.It's a completely different form of argument from what you're used to. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nebulous. Who is this 'one' to which it refers? What does it mean to 'start from' the beginning? What is the beginning of a triangle? What is the beginning of a wheel? What if different people would start first at different places - then there is no unique beginning, as it depends on who we're asking.Beginning means that part of a thing from which one would start first. Is that well-defined or is it nebulous? — Πετροκότσυφας
Not at all. Nobody is denying he had a huge influence, just as Galen did with Medicine. The fact that medical schools no longer teach Galen's beliefs does nothing to deny his historical importance.Seems like just dismissal to me with how huge Aristotle was for the development of Philosophy. — Marty
The evidence does not support such a belief. Surveys have shown that large proportions of scientists are not theists, or part of any religion (eg here), and hence one would not expect them to believe teleological accounts. Yet they manage to continue to produce inspiring, useful science.I really don't think any form of science can be done without telos — Marty
Because you talked about the central importance of consistency - ie checking out that Aristotle uses the term with the same definition/meaning throughout. That's irrelevant.Then why did you say that what I said was crap? That was a senseless insult. — Metaphysician Undercover
The evidence does not support such a belief. Surveys have shown that large proportions of scientists are not theists, or part of any religion (eg here), and hence one would not expect them to believe teleological accounts. Yet they manage to continue to produce inspiring, useful science.
Even a practising scientist is not in a position to make such a statement, unless they have worked in every scientific field. If you have not studied science at least to tertiary level, and preferably engaged in at least some research, this opinion is simply uninformed.I think all sciences have an a-priori metaphysical assumptions about them that guides how they are done — Marty
Even a practising scientist is not in a position to make such a statement, unless they have worked in every scientific field.
(teleology) relies on acceptance of an axiom of teleology rather than being presented as a proof that any reasonable person should accept.
Being “endowed with a purpose or project is essential to the very definition of living beings.” — Jacques Monod
“It would make no sense to talk of the purpose of adaptation of stars, mountains, or the laws of physics,” but “adaptedness of living beings is too obvious to be overlooked.... Living beings have an internal, or natural, teleology.” — Theodosius Dobzhansky
An interpretation of QM is not about working out what is meant by the things QM says. Those things are beyond question, as all QM does is make predictions about observations. An interpretation of QM is about speculating about the things that QM does not talk about. It is essentially proposing a set of metaphysical hypotheses that is consistent with QM. — andrewk
Because you talked about the central importance of consistency - ie checking out that Aristotle uses the term with the same definition/meaning throughout. That's irrelevant. — Agustino
Even a practising scientist is not in a position to make such a statement, unless they have worked in every scientific field. If you have not studied science at least to tertiary level, and preferably engaged in at least some research, this opinion is simply uninformed.
Science looks for patterns and makes models to describe them. One does not need to postulate a telos to do that, any more than one needs a telos when one looks for interesting shapes in clouds or star constellations. One may overlay a telos on it, if one's philosophical disposition encourages that - and some do. But such an overlay is strictly optional, and plenty don't. — andrewk
You're entitled to that view. I think you are taking too wide an interpretation of 'meaningless'. Science is useful and it is also beautiful, to those that understand it. You may not be in a position to find it beautiful but there is no question that you find it useful. If you don't also find it meaningful, be content that it is useful.Making mathematical predictions about observations is doing nothing more than saying that if we put two groups of two things together, then we'll have four things. Unless we know something about those things which we are dealing with, then the mathematics with all of its axioms and definitions, is meaningless. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are forgetting how that discussion arose. It has nothing to do with dismissing any activity. You claimed that the proliferation of interpretations of QM imply that QM's definitions are nebulous. My response was that interpretations talk about things that QM does not even seek to address, and that they are completely different activities, not that one is more important than the other. To complain that QM does not address the issues with which interpretations concern themself is like complaining because biology tells us nothing about how stars are formed.So it is wrong to dismiss an activity which is an attempt to understand, as less important, or not as reliable, as an activity which uses clear definitions — Metaphysician Undercover
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