April 1, 2005
THE UNDERLYING MYSTERY:
The Soul of a Controversy: After Terri Schiavo's death, questions remain. (DAVID B. HART, April 1, 2005, Opinion Journal)
[I] heard three people on the radio last week speculating on the whereabouts of her "soul." [...]Posted by Orrin Judd at April 1, 2005 11:16 PMWhat caught my attention was the unreflective dualism to which all three clearly subscribed: The soul, they assumed, is a kind of magical essence haunting the body, a ghost in a machine.
This is in fact a peculiarly modern view of the matter, not much older than the 17th-century philosophy of Descartes. While it is now the model to which most of us habitually revert when talking about the soul--whether we believe in such things or not--it has scant basis in either Christian or Jewish tradition.
The "living soul" of Scripture is the whole corporeal and spiritual totality of a person whom the breath of God has wakened to life. Thomas Aquinas, interpreting centuries of Christian and pagan metaphysics, defined the immortal soul as the "form of the body," the vital power animating, pervading, shaping an individual from the moment of conception, drawing all the energies of life into a unity.
This is not to deny that, for Christian tradition, the soul transcends and survives the earthly life of the body. It is only to say that the soul, rather than being a kind of "guest" within the self, is instead the underlying mystery of a life in its fullness. In it the multiplicity of experience is knit into a single continuous and developing identity. It encompasses all the dimensions of human existence: animal functions and abstract intellect, sensation and reason, emotion and reflection, flesh and spirit, natural aptitude and supernatural longing. As such, it grants us an openness to the world of which no other creature is capable, allowing us to take in reality through feeling and thought, recognition and surprise, will and desire, memory and anticipation, imagination and curiosity, delight and sorrow, invention and art.
oj -
Have you read any of the books, papers, speeches of Dr. Malcolm A. Jeeves?
Posted by: ghostcat at April 2, 2005 2:48 PMNo. Got a link?
Posted by: oj at April 2, 2005 2:52 PMoj -
Just do a Google search for "Malcolm Jeeves soul" and you'll find plenty. Much of his thinking is directly on point here.
Posted by: ghostcat at April 2, 2005 4:53 PM