The Motion of the Soul: Thomas Aquinas and Albert the Great on the Passions
Nov 23, 2024
About this article
Published Online: Nov 23, 2024
Page range: 49 - 63
Received: Sep 05, 2024
Accepted: Nov 05, 2024
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/ejsta-2024-0004
Keywords
© 2024 Ryosuke Matsumura, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.
This paper examines Aquinas’ and Albert’s respective interpretations of the term “motion” in Damasecene’s definitions of the passion. Although they have a common understanding of the term within an Aristotelian context, they hold differing attitudes toward it: Albert denies that passion is motion, saying that it is quality left from motion, whereas Aquinas affirms the notion of passion as motion. In this paper I expound on the difficulties Albert has with the term and how Aquinas resolves them. I argue that Aquinas successfully addresses the Albert’s difficulties, thus establishing a foundation for a more refined understanding of human psychology in relation to ethical behaviour.