Title
Christologically Inspired, Empirically Motivated Hylomorphism
Department/School
Philosophy
Date
2016
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://doi.org/10.11612/resphil.2016.93.1.6
Abstract
In this paper we present the standard Thomistic view concerning substances and their parts. We then note some objections to that view. Afterwards, we present Aquinas’s Christology, then draw an analogy between the relation that holds between the Second Person and the assumed human nature, on the one hand, and the relation that holds between a substance whole and its substance parts, on the other. We then show how the analogy, which St. Thomas himself drew at points, is useful for providing a theory that answers the objections that the standard Thomistic view faces. Finally we answer objections to our approach. We conclude that there is a hylomorphic theory, founded on an analogy from Aquinas’s Christology, that fits well with the empirical data concerning substance parts, on which some complete created material substances have other complete created material substances as parts.
Volume
93
Issue
1
Published in
Res Philosophica
Citation/Other Information
Pawl, Timothy ,and Mark Spencer. “Christologically Inspired, Empirically Motivated Hylomorphism.” Res Philosophica 93, no. 1 (2016): 137-60. https://doi.org/10.11612/resphil.2016.93.1.6