94 THOMAS AQUINAS
the latter’s thinking. For Aquinas, as
a Christian thinker, human beings
are only one type of the various
sorts of beings that are capable of
knowing things intellectually: souls
separated from their bodies in the
afterlife, angels, and God himself
can also do this. These other
knowing beings do not have
to acquire knowledge through the
senses. They can directly grasp
the definitions of things. This
aspect of Aquinas’s theory has
no parallel in Aristotle, but it is a
coherent development of Aristotle’s
principles. Once again Aquinas
is able to hold Christian beliefs
without contradicting Aristotle,
but going beyond him.
The human soul
According to Aristotle, the intellect
is the life-principle or “soul” of a
human being. All living things have
a soul, he believes, which explains
their capacity for different levels of
what he calls “life-activity”, such
as growing and reproducing, for
plants; moving, sensing, seeking,
and avoiding, for animals; and
thinking for humans.
Aristotle believes that “form” is
what makes matter into the thing
that it is. Within the human body,
this form is the soul, which makes
the body into the living thing that
it is by giving it a particular set of
life-activities. As such, the soul is
tied to the body, and so Aristotle
thinks that, even in the case of
humans, the life-soul survives only
so long as it animates a body, and
at death it perishes.
Aquinas follows Aristotle’s
teaching about living things and
their souls, and he insists that a
human being has just one form:
his or her intellect. Although other
13th- and 14th-century thinkers
also adopted the main lines of
Aristotle’s view, they cut the
connection Aristotle had made
between the intellect and the body,
so they could accommodate the
Christian teaching that the human
soul survives death. Aquinas,
however, refuses to distort
Aristotle’s position. This made it
far more difficult for him to argue—
as he did—for the immortality of
the human soul, in yet another
example of his resolve to be a good
Aristotelian, and philosopher, while
remaining a faithful Christian.
After Aquinas
Since the Middle Ages, Aquinas
has come to be regarded as the
official orthodox philosopher of
the Catholic Church. In his own
time, when translations of Greek
philosophy were being made from
Arabic, complete with Arabic
commentaries, he was one of the
thinkers keenest to follow Aristotle’s
train of philosophical reasoning,
even when it did not fit neatly with
Christian doctrine. He always
caused this newton’s cradle
to swing. But does the
existence of the universe
itself have a cause?
The laws of cause and effect lead us to look for the
cause of any event, even the beginning of the universe.
Aristotle supposed that God set the universe into
motion, and Aquinas agreed, but added that the
“Prime Mover”—God—must itself be uncaused.
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