Wynand De Beer

Reality


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properties of the elements. For example, fire has a characteristic power (Greek, dynamis) to produce burning heat. Since necessity is constrained by its own nature, Plato calls it a wandering cause; in other words, a cause without purpose.121

      The phenomenon of physical deformity has been explained by Thomas Aquinas in terms of Aristotelian causality: “For if the matter is not disposed to receive the agent’s imprint [i.e., the operation of the efficient cause] a defect will follow in the effect, as when monsters are born because of unprepared matter: the fact that it doesn’t transform and actualize the indisposed matter can’t be laid at the door of the agent, for agents have powers proportioned to their natures and their inability to go further can’t be called deficiency in power; we can say that only when its power falls short of the measure laid down by nature” (Summa contra Gentiles, 3.10).

      Synthesis: The Combination of Intellect and Necessity

      After describing the role of Necessity, Plato devotes the next part of the Timaeus to a discussion of the physical cosmos, which is presented as the offspring of the union of Intellect and Necessity. Stated the other way around, Intellect persuades Necessity to form the initial universe: “For the generation of this universe was a mixed result of the combination of Necessity and Intellect. Intellect overruled Necessity by persuading her to guide the greatest part of the things that become towards what is best; in that way and on that principle this universe was fashioned in the beginning by the victory of reasonable persuasion over Necessity” (Tim, 48a; Cornford’s translation). As Plato concludes, “That is why we must distinguish two forms of cause, the divine and the necessary” (Tim, 68e).

      However, the result of the restriction of the activity of Intellect by irrational Necessity is that the physical world displays both design and accident, is both purposeful and contingent, and harbours both good and bad. This statement should not be confused with Gnostic dualism, according to which the world is inherently evil due to its creation by an inferior deity. In the traditional understanding, evil is not self-existing but follows from a privation of goodness, just as darkness is due to an absence of light.

      It has often been stated that the human body is a marvel of design, and in the case of religious believers this design is attributed to God. Now, if one considers the immense complexity and intricacy of organs such as the brain, the heart, and the eye, then the human body does appear to be marvellously designed. If, on the other hand, one considers the extreme susceptibility of the human body to an almost infinite range of illnesses and injuries during the entire lifespan between conception and death, a rather different picture emerges. One only has to think of the plethora of childhood diseases and bone fractures, the debilitating conditions appearing later in life, such as multiple sclerosis, diabetes, and arthritis, and the horrors of a whole range of cancers, as well as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases.

      There are two possible explanations for this organic ambivalence: either the human body was designed by God, in which case He would have to be held responsible for the prevalence of disease and physical suffering among humans; or the human body is the product of the interaction between the divine Intellect and irrational Necessity, in which case there is no blame or responsibility involved in this matter. We contend that the latter alternative, as taught by Plato and Aristotle, is the more accurate one,