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Publication Details

The Human Being as ‘Compound’: Aquinas versus Descartes on Human Nature

(Original title: The Human Being as ‘Compound’: Aquinas versus Descartes on Human Nature)
Filozofia, 79 (2024), 9, 955 - 969.
Type of work: Original Articles
Publication language: English
Abstract
The intuitively right answer to the question ‘What am I?’ is not ‘an incorporeal spirit’, but ‘a human being’. Aquinas reflects this common-sense view when he says that ‘the human is no mere soul, but a compound of soul and body.’ And Descartes, despite his notorious dualistic thesis that I am a substance that does not need anything material in order to exist, insists nevertheless that the human mind-body compound is a genuine unity in its own right, not a mere soul making using of a body. This paper argues for the enduring philosophical importance of this notion of our ‘compound’ nature as human beings, and explores its significance across three principal dimensions – the psychological, the phenomenological, and the moral.
Keywords

Soul, Body, Human being, Aristotle, Aquinas, Descartes, hylemorphism, Intellect, passions

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