Resurrection, Reassembly and Reconstitution Aquinas On The Soul
Resurrection, Reassembly and Reconstitution Aquinas On The Soul
Resurrection, Reassembly and Reconstitution Aquinas On The Soul
Introduction
Niederbacher, B. / Runggaldier, E., Hgg. (2006), Die menschliche Seele: Brauchen wir den
Dualismus? The Human Soul: Do We Need Dualism? Frankfurt – London: ontos verlag, 151172.
152 Eleonore Stump
that Socrates can be brought back simply by providing his soul (which still
exists) with a newly created human body. But what will the materialist say?
From the point of view of the materialist, it looks as if asking God to bring
Socrates back is like asking him to bring back the snows of yesteryear or the
light of other days. For what can even omnipotence do but reassemble? What
else is there to do? And reassembly is not enough [...].2
Van Inwagen goes on to pose a challenge for any theory which supposes
both that there is a resurrection for human beings and that human beings
are material composites. He says:
[...] if Socrates was a material thing, a living organism, then, if a man who lives
at some time after Socrates’ death and physical dissolution is to be Socrates,
there will have to be some sort of material and causal continuity between the
matter that composed Socrates at the moment of his death and the matter that at
any time composes that man. […] But ‘physical dissolution’ and ‘material and
causal continuity’ are hard to reconcile. To show how the continuity require
ment can be satisfied, despite appearances – or else to show that the continuity
requirement is illusory – is a problem that must be solved if a philosophically
satisfactory ‘materialist’ theory of resurrection is to be devised.3
This problem is thought by many to afflict Aquinas’s theory of resur
rection too, because Aquinas does not identify a human being with his
soul. What we now commonly call ‘Cartesian dualism’ was an account of
human beings Aquinas knew and associated with Plato, and he repudiated
it energetically.4 So, for example, Aquinas says:
Plato claimed that a human being is not a composite of soul and body but that a
human being is the soul itself using a body […]. But this position is shown to be
impossible. For an animal and a human being are natural, senseperceptible
things. But this would not be the case if a body and its parts did not belong to
the essence of a human being and of an animal. Instead, on Plato’s view, the
whole essence of both a human being and an animal would be the soul, although
the soul isn’t anything senseperceptible or material. And for this reason it is
impossible that [something that is] a human being and an animal be a soul using
a body.5
On Aquinas’s own view, the soul is the form of the body, and a human
being is a composite of matter and form. How, then, does Aquinas’s theory
of resurrection deal with the problems posed for nonCartesian (or, as
Aquinas would think of it, nonPlatonic) theories by van Inwagen and
Swinburne? On Aquinas’s theory of resurrection and his account of human
beings as material composites, what makes the resurrected body of Socra
tes the same body Socrates had during his earthly life? What makes the
resurrected Socrates Socrates?
As far as that goes, on Aquinas’s account how are we to understand
what happens to a human being between earthly death and resurrection in
an afterlife? Aquinas believes that the soul is capable of existence without
the body; between earthly death and resurrection, he thinks that the soul
persists separated from the body. But the separated soul is not a material
composite. So what are we to say about a human being in the period in
which all that remains of him is the separated soul? Does he continue to
exist during that period? If he does, then in what sense is it true to say that
he is a material composite? On the other hand, if he is a material com
posite, then how could it be true that he exists when the matter composing
him is gone?
In this paper, I want to try to shed some light on these questions and on
Aquinas’s theory of the resurrection by looking with some care at Aqui
nas’s basic metaphysics of matter and form as well as at his theological
treatments of the persistence of the soul and the nature of the resurrection. I
will first consider one interpretation of Aquinas’s position on these issues
which is held by some contemporary expositors of his views but which is
incorrect in my view. Then I will try to sketch an interpretation of Aqui
nas’s position which is preferable; and I will show the way in which, on
that interpretation, Aquinas’s position accounts for the identity of a resur
rected human being.
Without any doubt, Aquinas accepted the Christian doctrine that, after the
death and before the resurrection of the body, the soul persists in a sepa
rated state. Since it is also beyond doubt that for Aquinas a human being is
a material composite, some scholars take it as evident that for Aquinas the
separated soul is not the same as the human being whose soul it was during
that person’s life on earth. On their interpretation of Aquinas, Aquinas
thinks that the soul of Socrates, separated from the body of Socrates, is not
a human being and that, for this reason, the soul of Socrates is not Socra
tes. In the view of these interpreters, Aquinas’s position is that when So
crates’s soul is separated from Socrates’s body, Socrates ceases to exist.
So, for example, van Inwagen says:
Aquinas [...] sees the human person as essentially a composite of a human soul
and a human body. According to the ‘composite’ theory, a person cannot exist
without a body: to exist is for one’s soul (always numerically the same) to ani
mate some human body or other. (In the interval between one’s death and one’s
receiving a new body at the time of the general resurrection, one’s soul exists
and thinks and has experiences, but one does not, strictly speaking, exist.)6
Van Inwagen, of course, is a metaphysician and not a scholar of medie
val philosophy. But the interpretation of Aquinas’s views van Inwagen
expresses can be found even among those whose area of expertise includes
the thought of Aquinas. So, for example, Robert Pasnau also argues that
for Aquinas a separated soul is not a human being and therefore that a hu
man being ceases to exist at death, on Aquinas’s position. As one example
supporting this interpretation, Pasnau cites a passage from Aquinas’s Sen
tence commentary in which Aquinas is discussing the separated soul of
Abraham. In that place, as Pasnau rightly points out, “Aquinas remarks
[…] that ‘Abraham’s soul is not, strictly speaking, Abraham himself’”.7
Pasnau claims that Aquinas “insists on this point precisely so as to argue
that bodily resurrection is necessary for human immortality. Hence [Aqui
nas] immediately concludes: ‘So Abraham’s soul’s having life would not
suffice for Abraham’s being alive.’” In Pasnau’s view, this passage shows
6 Van Inwagen (1998), 295.
7 The passage is cited by Pasnau as Scriptum super libros Sententiarum IV 43.1.1.1
ad 2. For Pasnau’s extended argument in defense of his own interpretation of Aquinas’s
account of the soul, see his excellent book Thomas Aquinas on Human Nature. A
Philosophical Study of Summa theologiae Ia 7589 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002).
Resurrection, Reassembly, and Reconstitution: Aquinas on the Soul 155
that Aquinas cannot have supposed that “the persistence of the soul ‘is suf
ficient for the existence’ of the human being”. Rather, in Pasnau’s view,
the passage makes plain that Aquinas “would deny that a human soul could
constitute a human being.”
For Pasnau as for van Inwagen, then, Aquinas must hold that a human
being ceases to exist at bodily death and comes back into existence only
with the resurrection of the body. On this interpretation of Aquinas’s posi
tion, the challenge for Aquinas is to find some solution to the problems af
flicting those who accept human immortality but reject Cartesian (or Pla
tonic) dualism.
But I do not think that the interpretation of Aquinas represented by the
views of Pasnau and van Inwagen can possibly be right. To see why not,
we need to consider Aquinas’s views of the separated soul and his theo
logical claims about it.
To begin with, the separated soul has a mind. It has both sensory and
intellectual knowledge; it can know singulars as well as universals. Fur
thermore, insofar as the separated soul of Socrates, for example, is the
rational soul which configured Socrates during his earthly life, the mind of
the separated soul of Socrates is the mind of Socrates. The intellectual
faculties of the separated soul of Socrates are the intellectual faculties So
crates had during his lifetime. So, for example, the memories that Socrates
laid down during his earthly life are the memories of the separated soul of
Socrates. And insofar as the will is a rational faculty, the will of the
separated soul of Socrates is the same will as the will which Socrates had
during his lifetime. Finally, the separated soul also has experiences and
passions. If it is in hell, for example, the separated soul experiences pain
and has the passion of sorrow; and the mind in the separated soul affected
by these passions is the mind of Socrates. But how can these things be true
if Socrates has ceased to exist?
On the other hand, if van Inwagen and Pasnau are right in their inter
pretation that, for Aquinas, Socrates ceases to exist when he dies and that
the separated soul of Socrates is not Socrates, we will have an array of very
troubling questions.
Suppose we ask about the separated soul that typical medieval question,
quid est?. If the separated soul which thinks, knows, wills, desires, and
grieves is not a human being, then what is it? It is clearly a hoc aliquid, a
something. That is, it has no place on any of the nine categories of being
156 Eleonore Stump
other than substance, since those are all categories of accidents; but no ac
cident can think, will, and suffer. Since, on the view of Pasnau and van
Inwagen, the separated soul is not a human being, however, it also appar
ently does not fall under the category of rational animal. So what is it then?
It is true that Aquinas’s ontology allows for parts of substances to continue
to exist in detachment from the substances of which they are parts; a
severed hand of a human being can persist after its detachment from the
human body, for example. But Aquinas denies that a detached part of a
material composite is a substance, and his reason for this position is
precisely that such a part has its characteristic function only when it is not
detached but is included in the whole it helps to constitute. So if the soul
maintains its characteristic intellectual functions after it is detached from
its whole, namely, the human being it informed, then it cannot be relegated
to the class of parts of substances, such as severed hands. Where in
Aquinas’s ontology does it then belong?
But there is an even worse question in this neighborhood. Since, on this
interpretation of Aquinas, the separated soul of Socrates is not Socrates and
yet thinks, wills, and feels, we can ask not only what the separated soul is
but also who it is. How could there be something which has a mind and a
will but is not somebody? Clearly, anything which thinks, wills, and feels
has to be a person in some sense of the term. In fact, since the separated
soul has rational capacities and is capable of independent existence, it
seems to fit the definition of a person Aquinas inherits from Boethius: a
person is an individual substance of a rational nature. Or if that is too much
to say, then at least this is true: for Aquinas, the separated soul is an inde
pendently existing thing with rational capacities. So if the separated soul of
Socrates is not Socrates, then who is it?
And what happens to the thinking, experiencing separated soul when
Socrates is resurrected? Does the separated soul go out of existence when
Socrates comes back into existence, since the separated soul is not the
same as Socrates? As far as that goes, anything which thinks and wills is a
living thing. So does the separated soul die when Socrates is resurrected?
Does the separated soul know that it will die when Socrates returns to
existence? Does the separated soul desire that the resurrection of Socrates
be postponed as long as possible so that it might not die? On the other
hand, if the separated soul does not die or go out of existence when Socra
tes is resurrected, then does the separated soul somehow persist in the
Resurrection, Reassembly, and Reconstitution: Aquinas on the Soul 157
resurrected Socrates? But how could that be? If the soul is an existent thing
which is different from Socrates and yet persists in the resurrected Socra
tes, then in what sense could the resurrected Socrates be one thing? On the
contrary, if the separated soul is not Socrates and yet persists in the resur
rected Socrates, then the resurrected Socrates seems to be Socrates and the
separated soul.
And there is worse to come. On Aquinas’s theological views, before the
general judgment of all humanity, each separated soul is judged, individu
ally, at the moment of the bodily death of the human being whose soul it is.
But at that individual judgment, the separated soul is judged on the basis of
the actions and dispositions of the human being it informed. The separated
soul of Socrates is judged by Christ on the basis of the life of Socrates;
and, on the basis of this judgment, the soul either enjoys the blessings of
heaven or the pains of the fires of hell. Aquinas says:
When the soul is separated from the body, it receives its reward or punishment
immediately for those things which it did in the body […]. In the providence of
God, rewards and punishments are due to rational creatures. Since when they are
separated from the body, they are immediately capable both of glory and of
punishment, they immediately receive one or the other; and neither the reward
of the good nor the punishment of the bad is put off until the souls take up their
bodies again.8
But if the soul of Socrates is not Socrates, then what justice is there in
assigning to the separated soul either the reward or the punishment merited
by Socrates, who is not the soul? Furthermore, on Aquinas’s views, the
soul does not exist in advance of the human being whose soul it is. So if
the separated soul of Socrates is not Socrates, then whatever and whoever
the separated soul is, it comes into existence for the first time with the
death of Socrates. But what sense does it make to suppose that God assigns
a reward or a punishment for a created thing which has done nothing wor
thy of reward or punishment in virtue of having done nothing at all, since it
comes into existence only at the time of the divine judgment? (There is no
point in looking to the doctrine of predestination for help here, since the
doctrine of predestination is separate from the doctrine of judgment. Di
vine predestination of a person is independent of any merits on the part of
the person predestined, but judgment is precisely a response to the merits
or demerits of the person judged.)
Worse yet, the separated soul of a saint, say, Dominic, goes to heaven,
on Aquinas’s view, and enjoys the beatific vision, loving God and being
loved by God. Aquinas says that
[...] when the body is destroyed, the soul is brought to an eternal and heavenly
home, which is nothing other than the enjoyment of the deity, as the angels en
joy it in heaven […]. And so, immediately, when the holy soul is separated from
the body, it sees God by sight. And this is the final beatitude.9
But if the separated soul of Dominic is not Dominic, then that something
whichisnotDominic, with a mind and a will, loves God in heaven and is
loved by him – but only for the period between the death and the resurrec
tion of Dominic. At the point of the resurrection of Dominic, the place in
the loving union with God held by the separated soul of Dominic is taken
by Dominic himself. So something that God loves in union with him, the
separated soul of Dominic, God ceases to hold in loving union with him
self in heaven when Dominic is resurrected. For no fault on the part of the
separated soul of Dominic, the bliss the separated soul had in loving union
with God terminates, never to be resumed. Does the separated soul know
and fear this loss of union with God? Or is the separated soul in the beatific
vision of heaven in a state of ignorance about its future loss of beatitude?
And what about God, on this interpretation of Aquinas? On this interpreta
tion, we have to say that God loses forever one of his beloveds, the sepa
rated soul of Dominic, who had been united to God for a period of time in
the union and beatific vision of heaven.
Not only are these views theological gibberish, but they are contradicted
by Aquinas’s explicit claims about the nature of the separated soul’s bliss.
He says, for example, that
[...] souls immediately after their separation from the body become unchange
able as regards the will [...]. [...] beatitude, which consists in the vision of God,
is everlasting […]. But it is not possible for a soul to be blessed if its will did not
have rectitude […]. And so it must be that the rectitude of the will in the blessed
soul is everlasting [...].10
In addition, if a separated soul is not the same human being as the per
son whose soul it is, then the pain or bliss of the separated soul immedi
ately after death is not the pain or bliss of the human being whose soul it is.
But Aquinas uses the bliss of the redeemed separated soul immediately
after death as a way of showing that death is not to be feared. He says:
But if someone wants to object that the Apostle did not say that immediately
when the body is destroyed, we will have an eternal home in heaven in actuality,
but rather only in hope – […] this is clearly contrary to the Apostle’s intention
[…]. The point is made even more clearly [in the Pauline lines] that follow:
“[…] we are confident and are willing, with a good will, to be absent from the
body, and to be present to the Lord” [...]. But we should be willing in vain “to be
absent from the body,” – that is, separated [from the body] – unless we were to
be present immediately to the Lord […]. Immediately, therefore, when the holy
soul is separated from the body, it sees God by sight […]. Therefore, the
Apostle was hoping that immediately after that destruction of his body he would
come to heaven.11
In this passage, it is clear that, on Aquinas’s views, when the separated
soul of Paul is in heaven, Paul himself is in heaven, contrary to the inter
pretation which takes Aquinas to hold that a human being exists only in an
embodied condition.
Nor is this the end of the problems generated by this interpretation of
Aquinas. For example, it is also Christian doctrine, explicitly accepted, ex
plained, and developed by Aquinas that, at Christ’s death, before the last
judgment and the resurrection of the body, Christ harrowed hell. On this
doctrine, the souls of those believing Jews who lived before the time of
Christ and were waiting for the Messiah were sent to Limbo; and, in the
harrowing of hell, Christ brought them out of Limbo into heaven. But on
the interpretation of Aquinas according to which the separated soul of
Abraham is not Abraham, Aquinas has to hold that Abraham himself was
not in Limbo when the separated soul of Abraham was in Limbo. Instead,
on this interpretation of Aquinas, Aquinas has to say that Abraham went
out of existence with his death; and he will return to existence only when
he is resurrected, at which time he will be in heaven with all the redeemed.
And so, since the separated soul of Abraham was removed from Limbo be
fore the general resurrection of the body, there is in fact no time ever at
which Abraham was in Limbo. And since there were only separated souls
in Limbo at the time of Christ’s harrowing of hell, then, on this interpreta
tion, Aquinas will also have to say that Christ never took any human
beings from Limbo.
These claims are not only obviously heretical, so that it is historically
implausible to attribute them to Aquinas, but they are also contradicted by
explicit claims of Aquinas’s. For example, Aquinas says:
[...] the holy Fathers were held in hell because access to the life of glory was not
available to them on account of the sin of our first parent. [...] when Christ
descended into hell, he freed the holy Fathers from hell. […]. [So] it is written
that “despoiling the principalities and powers,” namely, of hell, by taking out
Isaac and Jacob and the other just souls, “he brought them over,” that is, “he
brought them far from the kingdom of darkness into heaven,” as the gloss ex
plains.12
In this passage, Aquinas makes plain his view that, at the time of Christ’s
descent into Hell, when Limbo contained only separated souls, the
inhabitants of Limbo were the patriarchs themselves. On Aquinas’s view,
not just the separated souls of Isaac and Jacob, but Isaac and Jacob them
selves, were taken from Limbo when the souls were delivered in Christ’s
harrowing of hell.
These texts and many others make plain the unacceptability of the inter
pretation which assigns to Aquinas the view that a human being ceases to
exist at death and that a separated soul is not the same human being as the
person whose soul it is. That interpretation has to attribute to Aquinas
views which make his theological position bizarre or heretical and which
are explicitly denied by him in one place or another. It is abundantly clear
therefore that for Aquinas the existence of the separated soul is sufficient
for the existence of the human being whose soul it is.
But, then, we need to ask, how can Aquinas also hold that a human be
ing is a material composite? It seems as if, for Aquinas, either a human
being is identical to his soul, in which case a human being is not a material
composite, or else a human being is a material composite, in which case he
is not identical to his soul. How is it possible for a human being to be a
material composite and yet to continue to exist in the absence of his body?
form of Socrates.17
But how are the substantial forms of material objects such as human
beings individuated? The answer is expressed in Aquinas’s line that matter
individuates.18 The line is wellknown, but its meaning is less evident.
For Aquinas, the substantial form of any material substance configures
prime matter, that is, matter which is devoid of every form, without any
configuration. On the other hand, when Aquinas attempts to explain the
concept of matter relevant to individuation, he tends to speaks of it as
matter under indeterminate dimensions,19 that is, matter which is extended
in three dimensions but where the degree of extension in any dimension is
not specified. Now any actually existing matter has determinate dimen
sions. But the particular degree of extension in a dimension is one thing;
the materiality, as it were, of matter is another thing. The determinate
dimensions of a material thing have to do with exactly what space that
thing occupies. On the other hand, matter under indeterminate dimensions,
that is, the materiality of the matter, is responsible for the spaceoccupying
feature itself. Matter is the sort of thing which is here now, in a way that
numbers, for example, are not. But this feature of matter, its spaceoccu
pying character, can be considered without specifying the precise spatial
locations which any particular material thing occupies. Matter is this
matter in virtue of occupying this space, even if the dimensions of that
space are indeterminate. And so because matter has an irreducible space
occupying character, we can distinguish one substantial form from another
by its association with matter. This substantial form is the configuration of
this matter, and that one is the configuration of that matter.20
For Aquinas, then, all the matter of a material substance is configured
directly by a particular substantial form. That is, the substantial form of a
17 Expositio super librum Boethii De trinitate 2.4.2; cf. also Summa theologiae
I.119.1 and Quaestiones disputatae de potentia 9.1.
18 Perhaps the most detailed exposition of this view of his is in his Expositio
super librum Boethii De trinitate 2.4.2.
19 Expositio super librum Boethii De trinitate 2.4.2. Aquinas does not always
describe his position on this score in the same way, and the variation in
terminology suggests to some scholars either a development in his thought or a
series of changes of mind. The issue is complicated, and so I am leaving it to one
side here. For the discussion of the scholarly controversy, see Wippel (2000), 357
373.
20 Cf., e.g., Summa theologiae III.3.7 ad 1 where Aquinas says that a
substantial form is multiplied in accordance with the division of matter.
Resurrection, Reassembly, and Reconstitution: Aquinas on the Soul 163
substance such as a cat does not weave together the integral parts of the cat
– the legs and trunk and so on – or any other matterform composites in the
cat. Rather, every material part of the cat is a catish part, which is what it
is in virtue of being informed by the substantial form cat. But what makes
a substantial form cat this particular substantial form cat is that there is
some particular materiality, now and here, which is informed by that form.
In the case of human beings, Aquinas’s idea is the same. What individuates
Socrates is this substantial form of a human being; and a substantial form
of a material substance such as Socrates is this substantial form in virtue of
the fact that it configures this matter.
On this way of understanding the form that is the human soul, it is also
easier to see why Aquinas thinks that the soul makes matter be not just
human but also this human being. The soul is imposed on prime matter,
whose basic materiality or extensibility then differentiates this form with
its spatiotemporal location from any other. In fact, Aquinas thinks that, for
human beings, each soul is, as it were, handcrafted by God to inform this
matter.21
For Aquinas, then, the soul is, we might say, an individual configured
configurer of matter.
Aquinas’s way of individuating the substantial forms of material sub
stances has seemed to some people to pose a problem for his claim that the
separated soul can exist independently of the body after death. It is true
that the separated soul of Socrates will differ from the separated soul of
Plato in virtue of having configured the body of Socrates rather than the
body of Plato. But some philosophers suppose that, even so, Aquinas is
stuck with an incoherent position. So, for example, Swinburne says:
If Aquinas’ view is to be spelled out coherently, it must be done […] [in terms
of intrinsic properties of the soul]. What did happen to a soul in the past, namely
that it was united to a certain body, and will happen to it in future cannot make it
the soul it is now. That must be something internal to it now. Religious believers
who believe that humans can exist without their bodies, even if only tempora
rily, must hold that. So too must any believer who holds that there is life after
death, even if souls do not exist separately from bodies.22
I am not sure why Swinburne supposes that a historical characteristic of
a thing is insufficient for its individuation. If engineers succeed in con
structing an exact duplicate, molecule for molecule identical, of Michel
21 But see also the other issues having to do with the individuation of the soul
discussed in Stump (2003), 3560.
22 Swinburne (1998), 45.
164 Eleonore Stump
nas a whole is greater than the sum of its parts. In many places in his texts,
he makes plain that, in virtue of having its elements configured by the form
of the whole, the whole has emergent properties not had by any of its parts,
so that a sum of the parts and the properties of the parts will not be equi
valent to the whole. So, for example, Aquinas says:
[...] a composite is not those things out of which it is composed, [...] [as, for ex
ample,] flesh is not identical to fire and earth [the elements of which it is com
posed].25
In fact, Aquinas’s views of change commit him to the claim that con
stitution is not identity. On the Aristotelian understanding of change Aqui
nas inherits and accepts, a thing which gains or loses an accidental form
undergoes change while remaining one and the same thing. Quantities, in
cluding quantity of matter, are also accidents. So, on Aquinas’s position, a
human being who loses a quantity of matter, such as a hand or a leg, for
instance, remains one and the same thing while undergoing change. If,
however, constitution were identity for Aquinas, then a human being
whose material constituents changed would cease to be the thing he was
and become some other thing instead. In that case, contrary to Aquinas’s
position, the gain or loss of an accident such as quantity of matter would
not be a change in a human being; it would be the destruction of one thing
and the generation of another.
Furthermore, because constitution is not identity for Aquinas, it is also
possible for him to suppose that a particular substance survives even the
loss of some of its metaphysical constituents, provided that the remaining
constituents can exist on their own and are sufficient for the existence of
the substance.
Consequently, for Aquinas, a human being is not identical to either the
integral or the metaphysical parts which constitute him. Normally, the in
tegral parts of a human being include two hands, but a human being can
exist without being in the normal condition. A human being can survive
the loss of a hand or other of his larger integral parts, as well as the ele
mental bits of which such larger integral parts are composed. That is why
the loss of a hand or the amputation of a limb is not the destruction of a
human being. Aquinas would therefore repudiate the sort of mereological
essentialism which identifies a person as the whole sum of his material
discussion of the constitution relation, see Baker (1999). Cf. also Baker (2000).
25 Sententia super Metaphysicam VII.17.16731674.
166 Eleonore Stump
death of the body. As these interpreters read Aquinas, if my soul is not me,
but my soul is all that continues to exist after the death of my body, then it
seems that I do not survive bodily death. Whatever else can be said about
what persists after bodily death, it is not me. A second, closely related28
objection to my interpretation of Aquinas arises from Aquinas’s insistence
that the soul alone is not a human being.29 In the view of some interpreters,
if (as I claim) Aquinas thinks that the existence of a soul is sufficient for
the existence of a human being, then since for Aquinas the soul sometimes
exists in a disembodied condition, it seems that on my interpretation the
soul in that condition must be a human being, contrary to Aquinas’s own
oftrepeated claim. But, as I also explained earlier, the passages in which
Aquinas denies that a soul is a person or a human being need to be read in
the context of Aquinas’s other views; and when they are, we plainly have
to hold that Aquinas thought a human being survives bodily death as a
separated soul. If we read those passages on the supposition that for Aqui
nas a human being ceases to exist with the death of the body, the result is a
theological confusion studded with large, explicit, obvious contradictions.
On the other hand, the texts in which Aquinas claims that a human
being is not a separated soul or that a separated soul is not a human being
are compatible with the position that a human being survives death as a
separated soul if we give proper weight to the distinction between consti
tution and identity in his thought. A human person is not identical to his
soul; rather, a human person is identical to an individual substance in the
species rational animal. A particular of that sort is normally, naturally,
composed of form and matter configured into a human body. Because con
stitution is not identity for Aquinas, however, a particular can exist with
less than the normal, natural complement of constituents. It can, for exam
ple, exist when it is constituted only by one of its main metaphysical parts,
namely, the soul. And so although a person is not identical to his soul, the
existence of the soul is sufficient for the existence of a person. Similarly, it
which Aquinas explains that the venial sins of a human being are purged
through his suffering in purgatory. Now the sufferings in purgatory, as
Aquinas makes plain, are the sufferings of the separated soul alone. Con
sequently, if Aquinas thinks that a person purges his venial sins in purga
tory, then it must be that he also takes the separated soul in purgatory to be
the person whose venial sins are being purged. And so in the passage im
mediately following the one about Abraham, Aquinas is clearly main
taining that a human being can persist as a separated soul.
Therefore, we should understand the passage about Abraham as part of
Aquinas’s attempt to repudiate the Platonic position that identifies a human
being with a soul alone. The claim about the life of Abraham then becomes
a denial that the life of the soul is sufficient for the life of the whole com
posite. And this is, of course, just right. The whole composite died when
Abraham underwent bodily death, and that whole composite will not live
again until the resurrection of the body. But the life of the soul is sufficient
for the continued existence of Abraham, even if it is not sufficient for the
life of the material whole of which Abraham is composed in his natural
condition.
So we can understand Aquinas as holding that a human being is com
posed of matter and form but is not identical to the components which con
stitute him. For Aquinas, any given substance is this thing just in virtue of
the fact that the form which configures it is this form. What is necessary
and sufficient for something to be identical to Socrates is that its
substantial form be identical to the substantial form of Socrates. Conse
quently, since the human soul is capable of independent existence, a hu
man being can continue to exist just as a separated soul.
It follows, then, that for Aquinas, there are no temporal gaps in the
existence of a human being. Socrates does not cease to exist when he dies.
And so there is continuity of mental states between a human being from
the period of his earthly existence to the time of his resurrection.
For all these reasons, the problems regarding reassembly of atoms which
trouble some versions of resurrection are not difficulties for Aquinas.
To begin with, on Aquinas’s views, the separated soul accounts for the
170 Eleonore Stump
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