In De anima, Aristotle struggles to give an analogy for the soul as entelecheia. At one point, he compares it to habitual knowledge, which is a kind of form that actualizes the capacity to know so that one is ready to act. The capacity is like matter and the habit like the form. Helpful, but just an analogy,
But I think that the scholastic saying "action follows being" is also helpful, possibly mores than the above-mentioned analogy. "Being" seems to be a more accurate description of the activity called the "soul."
But I think that the scholastic saying "action follows being" is also helpful, possibly mores than the above-mentioned analogy. "Being" seems to be a more accurate description of the activity called the "soul."
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