There are two senses of abstraction ins Q. 85 of the prima pars of the Summa theologiae: to see something under a certain formality and to separate something from what is around it.
Language, by the very fact that it uses word-units, tempts us to take as abstracted in the second sense what is given abstractly in the first sense.
Language tempts us to regard moments as pieces. That is how language bewitches philosophers.
Language, by the very fact that it uses word-units, tempts us to take as abstracted in the second sense what is given abstractly in the first sense.
Language tempts us to regard moments as pieces. That is how language bewitches philosophers.
Comments