In order to think Aristotelians naive about substantial form (that is to think that the talk of substantial form is the silly positing of what you can neither experience nor measure), you have to be naive about matter: that is, you have to look at it as being, ultimately, extension or generic STUFF. It is like the space that fills the area of volumes in geometry. Pure solidity. If such a conception is correct, then yes, it is silly to talk of substantial form.
If there is no pure extension, no monistic stuff, then there is only activity at every level... in which case, the most basic activity might be related to all others as being is to action in the phrase "action follows being." Such an activity is none other than substantial form.
If there is no pure extension, no monistic stuff, then there is only activity at every level... in which case, the most basic activity might be related to all others as being is to action in the phrase "action follows being." Such an activity is none other than substantial form.
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