The Greeks believe that the soul is an essential part of the body since it gives it life. The soul thinks, feels, and chooses[footnoteRef:1]. The interaction between the body and soul influences one another giving rise to the concept of dualism. They also view the soul as a simple form without any parts. Plato postulated that the soul is separated from the body and while the body degenerates, the soul leaves to form another life at death[footnoteRef:2]. Contrastingly, Aristotle considered the soul as a ‘form’ that cannot exist without the body. The following study explicates Aquinas’s views of the soul whilst appreciating the contribution given by Plato and Aristotle on the topic. [1: Terrance, W. Klein, The Nature of the Soul: The Soul as Narrative, Routledge, 2016: 4.] [2: Lean, Spruit, \"The Controversy over the Immortality of the Soul,\" Routledge Companion to Sixteenth Century Philosophy (2017): 225.]Christian theology subscribes to the concept of life after death, and it was only natural to adopt Plato’s idea of the soul. However, St Thomas Aquinas was keen on developing a conception of the soul based on Aristotle’s concept while accommodating the Christian doctrine[footnoteRef:3]. According to Aquinas, the soul was indeed a form, but a special one that could exist briefly without being embodied. In his postulation, human beings are made of body and soul, matter and form and that death entail the separation of the body from the soul[footnoteRef:4]. Therefore, the human body ceases to exist while the human soul survives and keeps existing after death. Aquinas described the human soul as the substantial form and unique among the forms of material substances because it can survive in separation from the body, as it does after death and before resurrections. [3: Terrance, W. Klein. The Nature of the Soul: The Soul as Narrative. Routledge, 2016: 4.] [4: Kendall, A. Fisher, \"Thomas Aquinas on the Metaphysical Nature of the Soul and its Union with the Body,\" PhD diss., Syracuse University, 2017:6.]
The modern time’s views on the souls provide that human beings have souls as an essential part of the body yet can also be separated from it as depicted by Aquinas and Plato. However, Aristotelianism argues that humans do not have souls and are made up of complicated and possessing properties that are absent in inanimate things.[footnoteRef:5] Therefore, conceptualizing the soul as something that can be separated from the body indicates that it ceases to exist at death once the body stops functioning. [5: Del, Potter, and Richard G. Howe, \"The Heart and Soul of Christianity: Does Any\" Body\" Know?\" (2015): 3.]
Aristotle & Metaphysics Aristotle calls the science he is seeking 'first philosophy or theology'. The objective of this study is to answer the question of what does first philosophy or theology consist and what is its object. In addition, this study will ask in what ways that it differs from other sciences and in what sense is it first? In the final analysis this study will answer if Aristotle's 'first philosophy
Aristotle and Tragedy To Aristotle, tragedy had to follow certain characteristics. These included certain rendering of protagonist, the style of the writing, the direction of the plot, the diction, the reflection, the context, and the melody. Each and everything had its own nuances and meaning and the ideal Tragedy would be written in such a way that the reader or spectator would find the protagonist similar to himself and pity him
Plato -- Life and Works Plato was born in Athens circa 425 BC, just after the onset of the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta. He lost his father at an early age, but through his mother's marriage to a friend of the leading statesman and general of Athens at the time, Plato became affiliated with some of the most influential circles of a city enjoying a Golden Age. The early
Finally, Socrates comes to the idea of knowledge as true judgment accompanied by "an account," meaning evidence or reason. In this context, knowledge would mean not only believing something true, but also having a reasonable justification for that belief; in other words, this definition proposes that knowledge means knowing a true thing and knowing why that thing is true. However, even here Socrates has a problem with the definition,
Nursing PhilosophyNursing practice thrives on the existence of a professional culture, which is established by the values and ethos fostered nurse practitioners (Roux & Halstead, 2018). The nursing profession is a rewarding and fulfilling career as it involves providing assistance to different people with health and wellbeing problems. While this profession is characterized by some challenges such as nursing burnout, it remains a rewarding career as nurse practitioners are involved
Chinese Poetry View from Li-Chao's Husband, or Afterward to an Afterward on Records on Metal and Stone" Friend, let me advise you. Friend, do not marry. Collect yourself a nice-looking cook for the kitchen, a winsome maid for the tidying up of one's bedroom, and let your mother boss you around every now and then, if you are the type of man who likes that sort of thing. Collect women rather than
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now