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Thomas Aquinas contra Transformism

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In my previous post Synthesis-versus-Analysis I dealt with the distinction between “true whole” and “false whole”. Now let’s see how that had relations with Aquinas and his refutation of biological macroevolution.

About the origin of man and the relations between his soul and body, Aquinas was clear:

Reply to objection 3: Some have claimed that the [first] man’s body was formed antecedently in time, and that later on God infused a soul into the already formed body. But it is contrary to the nature of the perfection of the first production of beings that God would make either the body without the soul or the soul without the body; for each of them is a part of human nature. It is especially inappropriate to make the body without the soul, since the body depends on the soul, but not vice versa. [Summa Theologiae, 91, IV]

Note that the above quote especially applies to the negation of the arise of man from a non-human being (anthropoid). But in general denies the material macroevolution of any living being, because no being is inanimate (also if obviously human soul is incomparably higher than any animal soul) and Aquinas states that “soul is the form of the body” (in Scholasticism, in general, the “form” is the qualitative “principle” or “essence” of a thing):

Reply to objection 3: […] But since the soul is the form of the body, it does not have esse separately from the body’s esse; instead, it is united to the body directly through its own esse. [ibidem, 76, VII]

We can conclude that Aquinas is contra universal macroevolution in principle, because macroevolution is transformation of bodies only, while in Aquinas soul and body are not separable and the latter causatively depends on the former. By the way, this crystalline Aquinas’ position, shows how inconsistent are some Catholics (or even neo-Thomists!) who think to can believe, in the same time, in the Catholic doctrine (of which Aquinas is the master reference) and biological transformism.

But here I want to elaborate a bit specifically the above Aquinas statement: “But it is contrary to the nature of the perfection of the first production of beings that God would make either the body without the soul or the soul without the body”.

Beings are “perfect” because they are “true wholes”. If they are “true wholes” then their constitution / organization spiritus-anima-corpus must be an integrated “unit” or “oneness”. As I said in the linked post a “true whole” is a synthesis that can be neither produced nor conceived by analysis, rather only by means of “synthetic knowledge” (related to intelligent design). Because of such “synthetic knowledge” any kind of being is a top-down manifestation / instantiation of a metaphysical archetype into matter, by means of a vertical causation across the three layers: spiritual, animic (soul), corporeal (body).

Differently, a material macroevolution, or macro-morphing, of a being A to a being B would be a step-by-step analytic process, which — as we have seen — can never reach the limit of the target “true whole”. If the limit unit is not reached, and the beings are units, they neither can be produced by such analytic manner nor we can speak of “perfection”, neither about the process nor about its result. Goes without saying that such analytic process fails also because doesn’t work at all on the spiritual and animic planes.

As a consequence, only the above synthetic “vertical causation” can account for the “perfection of the production of perfect beings”, as Aquinas puts it. Any analytic serial horizontal macroevolution wouldn’t be “perfect” and wouldn’t produce “perfect” beings at all. This is the reason why Aquinas speaks of “perfection of the first production of beings” and coherently denies transformism.

Of course Aquinas’ cosmologic teachings about creatures’ origin, which are rigorously based on ontological principles, agree perfectly with the modern perspective of engineering. To provide a practical example, engineers never physically transform — say — cars into airplanes, rather they design in abstracto and assembly cars and airplanes independently. Also engineers apply an intelligent “vertical causation”, from abstract archetypes to material systems. No wonder, it couldn’t be otherwise because truth, at any level, is necessarily coherent, and the principles of intelligent design are universal.

Comments
Niwrad: Soul and body are not separable in life, but soul and body are separated by death.
If they are separable by death, why do you (and/or Aquinas) refer to beings (soul and body) as "true wholes"? Can two things be a true whole for a limited time period? Can a true whole be split in two separate things? I don't understand.Box
August 25, 2014
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Box, Soul and body are not separable in life, but soul and body are separated by death. NDEs are events where you are "near death", where you experiment a bit of this separation, a partial detachment. Conversely, all the experiences where one tries to detach soul from body, the voluntary "exits in the astral or etheric body" -- as some call them -- are extremely dangerous indeed because a total detachment means death. Sure I do not suggest them.niwrad
August 25, 2014
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But alas Box, when the soul leaves the body, the body disintegrates into dust in fairly short order. Thus, once again, supporting Aquinas's overall thesis that the body cannot exist without the soul. semi-related notes; The Unbearable Wholeness of Beings - Stephen L. Talbott Excerpt: Virtually the same collection of molecules exists in the canine cells during the moments immediately before and after death. But after the fateful transition no one will any longer think of genes as being regulated, nor will anyone refer to normal or proper chromosome functioning. No molecules will be said to guide other molecules to specific targets, and no molecules will be carrying signals, which is just as well because there will be no structures recognizing signals. Code, information, and communication, in their biological sense, will have disappeared from the scientist’s vocabulary. http://www.thenewatlantis.com/publications/the-unbearable-wholeness-of-beings Coast to Coast - Vicki's Near Death Experience (Blind From Birth) part 1 of 3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e65KhcCS5-Y Quote from preceding video: 'I was in a body and the only way that I can describe it was a body of energy, or of light. And this body had a form. It had a head. It had arms and it had legs. And it was like it was made out of light. And 'it' was everything that was me. All of my memories, my consciousness, everything.' - Vicky Noratukbornagain77
August 25, 2014
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Bornagain77, your post about NDE's is most relevant. I have to admit that I wasn't aware of the fact that according to Aquinas soul and body are not separable - together they are a true whole (!!?). Therefor, (unless I'm missing something) according to Aquinas, NDE's are impossible.Box
August 25, 2014
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niwrad, it might be helpful to add that, due to vastly improved resuscitation techniques, we have far more observational evidence for the reality of the soul today than Aquinas had in his day. Moreover, in confirmation of Aquinas overall thesis, we have no observational evidence that 'transformism', i.e. macro-evolution, between species is possible.
Near-Death Experiences: Putting a Darwinist's Evidentiary Standards to the Test - Dr. Michael Egnor - October 15, 2012 Excerpt: Indeed, about 20 percent of NDE's are corroborated, which means that there are independent ways of checking about the veracity of the experience. The patients knew of things that they could not have known except by extraordinary perception -- such as describing details of surgery that they watched while their heart was stopped, etc. Additionally, many NDE's have a vividness and a sense of intense reality that one does not generally encounter in dreams or hallucinations.,,, The most "parsimonious" explanation -- the simplest scientific explanation -- is that the (Near Death) experience was real. Tens of millions of people have had such experiences. That is tens of millions of more times than we have observed the origin of species, (or the origin of life, or the origin of a molecular machine), which is never.,,, The materialist reaction, in short, is unscientific and close-minded. NDE's show fellows like Coyne at their sneering unscientific irrational worst. Somebody finds a crushed fragment of a fossil and it's earth-shaking evidence. Tens of million of people have life-changing spiritual experiences and it's all a big yawn. Note: Dr. Egnor is professor and vice-chairman of neurosurgery at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. http://www.evolutionnews.org/2012/10/near_death_expe_1065301.html "A recent analysis of several hundred cases showed that 48% of near-death experiencers reported seeing their physical bodies from a different visual perspective. Many of them also reported witnessing events going on in the vicinity of their body, such as the attempts of medical personnel to resuscitate them (Kelly et al., 2007)." Kelly, E. W., Greyson, B., & Kelly, E. F. (2007). Unusual experiences near death and related phenomena. In E. F. Kelly, E. W. Kelly, A. Crabtree, A. Gauld, M. Grosso, & B. Greyson, Irreducible mind (pp. 367-421). Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. Michaela's Amazing NEAR death experience - video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTcHWz6UMZ8
supplemental notes;
Memories of Near Death Experiences (NDEs): More Real Than Reality? - Mar. 27, 2013 Excerpt:,,,researchers,, have looked into the memories of NDE with the hypothesis that if the memories of NDE were pure products of the imagination, their phenomenological characteristics (e.g., sensorial, self referential, emotional, etc. details) should be closer to those of imagined memories. Conversely, if the NDE are experienced in a way similar to that of reality, their characteristics would be closer to the memories of real events. The researchers compared the responses provided by three groups of patients, each of which had survived (in a different manner) a coma, and a group of healthy volunteers. They studied the memories of NDE and the memories of real events and imagined events with the help of a questionnaire which evaluated the phenomenological characteristics of the memories. The results were surprising. From the perspective being studied, not only were the NDEs not similar to the memories of imagined events, but the phenomenological characteristics inherent to the memories of real events (e.g. memories of sensorial details) are even more numerous in the memories of NDE than in the memories of real events. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130327190359.htm A Doctor's Near Death Experience Inspires a New Life - video Quote: "It's not like a dream. It's like the world we are living in is a dream and it's kind of like waking up from that." Dr. Magrisso http://www.nbcchicago.com/on-air/as-seen-on/A-Doctor--186331791.html Dr. Eben Alexander Says It's Time for Brain Science to Graduate From Kindergarten - 10/24/2013 Excerpt: To take the approach of, "Oh it had to be a hallucination of the brain" is just crazy. The simplistic idea that NDEs (Near Death Experiences) are a trick of a dying brain is similar to taking a piece of cardboard out of a pizza delivery box, rolling it down a hill and then claiming that it's an identical event as rolling a beautiful Ferrari down a hill. They are not the same at all. The problem is the pure materialist scientists can be so closed-minded about it. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ingrid-peschke/near-death-experiences_b_4151093.html
bornagain77
August 25, 2014
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bornagain77 #6 Good comment. In a sense it is so! Each individual is God's creation, also if it is the result of biological reproduction across millennia. From the ontological viewpoint each individual is a vertical instantiation from God to matter, so to speak. It is said: "the return paths which lead to God are numerous as the souls of men" (thus also atheists have their path obviously...). This direct return (from the creature to the Creator) is possible indeed because of the above instantiation (from God to the particular individual).niwrad
August 25, 2014
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Niwrad: Body is a unit per se, because at least: (1) The body is an image of an archetype. Archetypes are true wholes and their images somehow inherit this property.
An archetype, if it can ground its own existence (which does not make sense to me), may be a true whole, however the body is not. A true whole does not inherit anything from something else; is independent. A unit, a true whole, cannot be caused by something else (external from the true whole).
Niwrad: (2) The body parts we consider are so functionally interrelated that it is hard to separate them.
The body symbolizes a unit. It is a material manifestation of a spiritual unit, but it is not identical with it, nor is it part of a true whole.
Niwrad: (3) In the embryo development all parts are in potency a whole and one cannot properly say they develop individually; it is a wonderful orchestration.
The wonderful orchestration does not originate from the body.
Niwrad: (4) As Silver Asiatic rightly say, the irreducible complexity paradigm is everywhere applied. Even when some body parts are amputated, the soul continues somehow to feel them.
A true whole cannot be amputated.
Niwrad: (5) The body of an individual recognizes its parts and reject those of another individual.
The body symbolizes a unit.
Niwrad: (6) Indeed this morning! a doctor said me “there is not such thing as to cure a part of the body, we should cure a patient as a whole”.
He is right. The body symbolizes a unit.
Niwrad: (7) A true top-down design perspective is always a synthetic vision, especially in biology. You are right that “body consists of parts”, but only from the analytic bottom-up reverse-engineering viewpoint. I don’t even cite the Darwinian perspective, which is nonsense.
There is top-down causation of the parts (body) but this top-down causation does not originate from the body.Box
August 25, 2014
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as to:
But it is contrary to the nature of the perfection of the first production of beings that God would make either the body without the soul or the soul without the body; for each of them is a part of human nature. It is especially inappropriate to make the body without the soul, since the body depends on the soul, but not vice versa.
Since everybody has a soul would not this also imply that God, besides creating humans uniquely, created each human uniquely?bornagain77
August 25, 2014
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Box #3 Body is a unit per se, because at least: (1) The body is an image of an archetype. Archetypes are true wholes and their images somehow inherit this property. (2) The body parts we consider are so functionally interrelated that it is hard to separate them. (3) In the embryo development all parts are in potency a whole and one cannot properly say they develop individually; it is a wonderful orchestration. (4) As Silver Asiatic rightly says, the irreducible complexity paradigm is everywhere applied. Even when some body parts are amputated, the soul continues somehow to feel them. (5) The body of an individual recognizes its parts and reject the implant of those of another individual. (6) Indeed this morning! a doctor said to me "there is not such thing as to cure a part of the body, we should cure a patient as a whole". (7) A true top-down design perspective is always a synthetic vision, especially in biology. You are right that "body consists of parts", but only from the analytic bottom-up reverse-engineering viewpoint. I don't even cite the Darwinian perspective, which is nonsense.niwrad
August 25, 2014
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By the way, this crystalline Aquinas’ position, shows how inconsistent are some Catholics (or even neo-Thomists!) who think to can believe, in the same time, in the Catholic doctrine (of which Aquinas is the master reference) and biological transformism.
Excellent point (in an equally excellent posting). It's surprising that so many neo-Thomists miss this very obvious aspect of Aquinas' teaching. At the same time, some might accept this argument and still reject ID since they'll accept this as a philosophical refutation of Darwinism but not as a position in support of ID. I think that's mistaken for the reason you gave -- namely, that ID does show scientific evidence of a being's wholeness (irreducibility) which points to vertical causation (design). Again, this was very good and I hope more ID researchers will look into this area. As it stands, Aquinas' teaching is generally distorted on this topic by the very people who identify themselves as his followers.Silver Asiatic
August 25, 2014
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A "true whole" (oneness) does not consist of parts - like the human mind. Obviously the body consists of parts. Therefor I reject Aquinas notion of the body being part of any oneness.Box
August 25, 2014
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Thanks vjtorley, My posts are really poor thing compared to yours! Yes, you are right, "perfection" has multiple meanings. In its higher sense, it can be applied to the metaphysical total Reality only, then properly nothing in the existence is "perfect". Among the lower meanings there is that I used here. Again you are right that medieval biology that Aquinas could know was much more limited than modern one. But the really great thinkers are indeed who were able to arrive to an universal synthesis illuminating all things, also if the analytic knowledge of details at their disposal was limited. And I am sure you and I agree that Aquinas was doubtlessly one of them!niwrad
August 25, 2014
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Hi niwrad, I greatly enjoyed reading this fascinating post. I was very interested to see the skillful use you made of the concept of perfection, in your exposition of what Aquinas wrote in the Summa Theologica, I, q. 91, art. 3. I hadn't thought about the passage in quite that way before. I should mention that since Aquinas followed Aristotle's biology, he did not view all living beings as perfect. The term "perfect being" was restricted by Aquinas to animals that reproduce sexually, and are "generated from seed." Other creatures, he believed, were generated from dead or decaying matter. Today, of course, we know better. While not all organisms reproduce sexually, none are capable of being generated from dead or decaying matter. Hence one could argue that Aquinas would have rejected macroevolution, period. I should add that while Aquinas believed that new species could arise through hybridization (e.g. mules), he denied that one species could change into another over time. Here are a few pertinent texts: Aquinas taught that the original species of plants and animals had been created in the works of the six days, and that they would last until the end of time, when the movement of the heavens will stop (see his Quaestiones Disputatae De Potentia Dei [Disputed Questions on the Power of God], Question V, article IX). Additionally, in his Summa Theologica I, q. 118, art. 3, reply to objection 1, Aquinas writes that all the species created by God were created in the first works: "God is said to have rested on the seventh day, not from all work, since we read (John 5:17): "My Father worketh until now"; but from the creation of any new genera and species, which may not have already existed in the first works." Further confirmation of Aquinas' views on the fixity of species is given in the following paragraph, where he writes: "Something can be added every day to the perfection of the universe, as to the number of individuals, but not as to the number of species" (Summa Theologica I, q. 118, art. 3, reply to objection 2). Finally, given Aquinas' assertion (see above) that living things reproduce according to their kind (Summa Theologica I, q. 72 a. 1, reply to obj. 3), there could be no question of an existing species evolving into a new species as a result of mutations accumulating over the course of time. That would contradict his essentialism.vjtorley
August 25, 2014
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