Francis A. Cunningham,
A THEORY ON ABSTRACTION
IN ST. THOMAS
‘Yar Reverexn Francis A. Cunvtwamam, 8.1. received his M. A.
from Woodstock College.
He has taught at Canisius College (Buffalo)
and is now teaching at Le Moyne College (Syracuse).
He has previously written for Tur Monin Scnoonwan.
“The text itself would not have been particularly difficult, were
it not for the commentators.” That was Maldonatus’s observation on
a passage in St. John.? And I suspect this may be also true of the
classic passage on abstraction in St, Thomas.? We have been brought
up on a watered-down version of the commentators. They do not
seem to have made any distinction between abstraction and precision.
And we have insisted on trying to read their total vs. formal abstrac-
tion into St. Thomas’s own abstractio totius vs. formae. This had
led to an imbroglio in two dimensions.
1st intention 2nd intention
accidental form — ‘white’
whole nature — ‘‘man’’ (body and soul)
whole supposit — ‘man’? (with individuating notes) <—> “humanity”
As I see it, the commentators’ total vs. formal abstraction is
nothing else but a first intention vs. a second, man vs. humanity.
And these differ as St. Thomas’s abstractio vs. precisio. “Man” can
signify an essence considered as a whole supposit, but “humanity”
is the formal (logical) part of that essence only.* St, Thomas’s
own abstractio totius vs, formae is the consideration of a whole
(physical) nature including matter as well as form (for example,
the body and soul of man) vs. the consideration of a mere accidental
form which could not exist as such apart from a suitable subject
(for example, white, snub). St, Thomas’s abstractions seem to be
all first intentions (for example, man, white, snub), wheroas his
‘Phe Modsrn Schootman, xxxv, May, 1958 QAOprecisions are all seconds
snubness).
These are ungainly expressions admittedly. And we cannot blame
the commentators for wanting to shorten them. They might have
introduced their total vs. formal abstraction as a substitute for either
contrast between a whole and a form, but they should not have tried
to make it do service for both. There are two different kinds of
wholes here which must be respected, and two different kinds of
forms.
An ossence considered as a whole supposit includes individual
sensible matter in some sort of confused way at least (for example,
“man” in “Socrates is a man”). An essence considered as a whole
Physical nature includes common sensible matter (for example,
(for example, humanity, whiteness,
abstraction
precision
POSSINLM INTELLECT first intention ys, second intention
essence as a whole
separatio of a real esse
abstractio formae of a real snub
abstractio Lotius
AGENT INTALLECY t abstractio
of a concrete ‘‘man’’
“total
abstraction”
animal vs.
‘The Commentators’
essence as a formal part
Ys. precisio entis sub ratione entitatis
vs. precisio of snubness
precisio of animality
vs. precisio
of an abstract ‘humanity’
“formal
abstraction”
Mn Joan, I, 5.
3In Boeth, de Trin., q. 6, a. 8,
De Ente, cap. 8; ed. C. Boyor, sz.
(Romo: Grogorian Univ., 1946), pp.19-20.
4LoM. Néyis, o., “Un livre... La
250
Philosophie de la nature, Quolques apo-
ries,” Etudes ef Recherches. Philosophie
(College of Oltawa), Cahier I (1986),
pp. 127-56, particularly pp. 192-36.“man” or “humanity”) so long as it contains a human body as
well as a soul. The individuating notes of the supposit suppressed
at best have been lost utterly in this shuffle from ‘‘man"” to
“humanity.” The first intention accidental forms of abstractio
formae (for example, white, snub) are real beings. The second
intention logical form of humanity in formal abstraction is a mere
being of reason. We have tried to line up the progression of
St. Thomas’s thought on a horizontal plane with that of the com-
mentators on a vertical which cuts up and clear across the other.
There are two different principles of division here, each equipped
to touch all the bases. That is what makes it so confusing. But
once grant this shift in perspective, both terminology and examples
straightway fall into a consistent pattern, For instance, St. Thomas
never calls humanity an abstraction. For that matter, he never
seems to have called the content of these rationes or formalities—
neither man nor humanity—an “abstraction.” His abstractio was
reserved for the operation itself, not for Lhe fruit of that operation.’
But he never uses “humanity” as the fruit of an abstraction either.
He describes that notion as the fruit of a prescinding process rather
than that of any abstraction. We never confuses these two processes.
And he had no reason to suppose anyone else would either. It was
not until well after his death, when the Dark Ages of nominalism had
begun to close down on his commentators, that the usage of abstractio
was transferred imperceptibly from that of a first intention, “man,”
to that of our second intention, “humanity.” Notice, this usage is
three steps removed from that of St. Thomas himself.
We should like to proceed in the following order: (1) the agont
intellect abstracts first intention, it prescinds seconds; (2) the pos-
sible intellect classifies these species into sciences; (3) the real
sciences are divided according to first intentions in St. Thomas; (4) the
three degrees are divided according to second intentions in the com-
mentators; (5) “abstraction” comes from Aristotle’s addition and
subtraction of forms; (6) the intellect abstracts from within, the
senses from without; (7) metaphysical objects are really distinct from
matter as in the second operation; (8) mathematical objects are
logically distinct from matter as in the first operation; (9) physical
objects are not distinct from matter; (10) the commentators’ total
A Theory on Abstraction in St. Thomas
Francis A. Cunningham, 8.3.
251
(Advances in Cultural Psychology) Sergio Salvatore, Tania Zittoun - Cultural Psychology and Psychoanalysis - Pathways To Synthesis-Information Age Publishing (2011)
(Advances in Cultural Psychology) Sergio Salvatore, Tania Zittoun - Cultural Psychology and Psychoanalysis - Pathways To Synthesis-Information Age Publishing (2011)