1. The Four Orders of Reason and Division of Sciences
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Lecture Notes
Main Topics #
Wisdom and the Nature of Order #
- Wisdom as perfection of reason: Thomas Aquinas opens with Aristotle’s principle sapienti est ordinare (it belongs to the wise to order things)
- Reason’s essential characteristic: Reason is fundamentally the ability to discern order; it “looks before and after,” meaning it perceives relations between things
- Sense vs. reason: Sense powers can know things in themselves (absolutely), but only reason/understanding can know the order of one thing to another
The Hierarchical Nature of Order #
- Two fundamental distinctions in order:
- Order of parts to each other
- Order of the whole to its end (purpose)
- The principle: The order of parts to one another exists because of the order of the whole to its end
- Examples: In a chair, the arrangement of legs to seat exists for the sake of the chair’s order to sitting; in an army, soldiers’ order to each other exists for the sake of the army’s order to victory
Four Types of Order and Corresponding Sciences #
Thomas divides all human knowledge by the order it considers:
1. Order not made by reason (Natural Philosophy and Metaphysics/Wisdom)
- The order found in nature itself, ultimately ordered by God
- Natural philosophy considers the order of natural things (e.g., seasons following in sequence)
- Metaphysics considers the highest order, including how parts of the universe are ordered to God as their end
2. Order made by reason in its own acts (Logic/Rational Philosophy)
- The ordering of thoughts to one another
- The assignment of thoughts to vocal sounds (words)
- The ordering of premises to conclusions in syllogisms
- Greek term: logica; Latin: ratio
3. Order made by reason in the acts of the will (Moral/Practical Philosophy)
- The ordering of voluntary (chosen) acts
- This subdivides into three parts based on different social contexts and ends:
4. Order made by reason in exterior matter (Mechanical Arts)
- The ordering of material things constructed by human reason (boxes, houses, chairs)
- Medieval distinction between mechanical/servile arts and liberal arts
The Definition of Human Acts #
- Human acts: Acts that proceed from the will according to the order of reason
- Not human acts: Natural acts not subject to will and reason (digestion, growth, reproduction)
- Importance for moral philosophy: Only human acts are properly subject to moral philosophical consideration; natural acts that occur in man are not
The Division of Practical Philosophy #
Why three parts? Man is naturally a social animal (zoon politikon) with needs at multiple levels:
Ethics (Monastic philosophy)
- Considers the acts of one individual man ordered to his own end
- Focuses on what one person should do to achieve his proper human flourishing
Domestic Philosophy
- Considers the acts of the domestic household ordered to the family’s end
- The family provides for necessities of life: generation, nourishment, discipline
- The family is necessary for mere living (esse)
Political Philosophy
- Considers the acts of the civil multitude (the city) ordered to the city’s common good
- The city provides for complete sufficiency of life—not just living, but living well (bene vivere)
- Without the city, one cannot have Shakespeare, Mozart, Thomas Aquinas, wine, or other goods that enable human flourishing
Unity of Order vs. Unity of Being #
Critical distinction for understanding the three parts:
Unity of being (e.g., the human body): All parts are bound together in one substance; therefore every act of a part is an act of the whole
- If I hit someone with my fist, it is my act; my jaw doesn’t need to hit back separately
- Therefore, the consideration of a whole with unity of being and its parts belongs to one science
Unity of order (e.g., family, city): Parts are ordered to each other but are not bound together in one substance
- A soldier in an army has acts that are not acts of the whole army
- If one city harms another city, it does not follow that all citizens of the harmed city should harm all citizens of the other city
- A father’s personal act (reading Shakespeare) is not an act of the family
- Therefore, different sciences must consider the whole and its parts separately
Key Arguments #
Thomas’s Comparative Method in His Premium #
- Difference from Aristotle’s premium: Aristotle’s premium is directed to the specific book at hand, establishing its subject matter and method; Thomas’s premium stands back to see the broader picture
- Pedagogical purpose: Thomas places the Nicomachean Ethics within the whole structure of human knowledge and reason
- The structural insight: By showing how practical philosophy fits into the four-fold division of sciences based on orders, Thomas prepares students to understand why ethics is structured as it is
The Argument for Three Parts of Practical Philosophy #
- Man is naturally a social animal who cannot provide for himself alone
- Therefore, he is naturally part of multitudes at different levels
- The domestic multitude (family) meets the need for necessities of life
- The civil multitude (city) meets the need for living well (complete sufficiency)
- Different ends require different philosophical considerations
- Therefore, practical philosophy must have three distinct parts
Acts Proper to Different Levels #
- Not every act of an individual is an act of his family or city
- Example: If President Obama reads Shakespeare for relaxation, this is not an act of the United States government or the Obama family as such
- But when a father buys a house in a safer neighborhood for his family’s good, this is an act of the father-as-part-of-the-family
- When voting, one acts as a citizen, not as an individual or as a family member
Important Definitions #
- Premium (Preamble): From the Greek proemion—“paving the way”; an introductory section that establishes the subject matter, its importance, importance, and method of proceeding in a work
- Wisdom (Sapientia): The greatest perfection of reason; characterized by the ability to order and arrange all things according to their proper ends
- Order (Ordo): The relation and proper arrangement of one thing to another; can be between parts and other parts, or between a whole and its end
- Human acts (Actus humani): Acts that proceed from the will according to the order of reason; the proper subject of moral philosophy
- Practical philosophy (Philosophia practica): The consideration of human acts as ordered to an end; divided into ethics, domestic philosophy, and political philosophy
- Unity of order (Unitas ordinis): A kind of unity where parts are arranged in relation to each other but do not constitute a single substance (e.g., family, army, city)
- Unity of being (Unitas essentiae): A kind of unity where parts are bound together in one substance (e.g., the human body)
Examples & Illustrations #
Examples of Order in Practical Affairs #
- Chair: The legs, seat, and back are ordered to each other (at proper angles) because the whole chair is ordered to sitting
- House: The arrangement of parts exists because the whole house is ordered to dwelling and protecting inhabitants from elements
- Army: Soldiers are ordered to each other because the whole army is ordered to its leader and to victory
- Universe: The parts of the universe are ordered to each other because the whole universe is ordered to God as its end
Examples of Acts at Different Levels #
- Individual level: A man studying geometry, listening to Mozart, drinking wine—ordered to the perfection of his own mind and person
- Familial level: A father choosing to read fairy tales to his children (as father, not as individual); a wife making pie, a man grilling steak and shoveling snow
- Political level: A citizen voting in an election (as citizen); a president making decisions for the country’s good
Contrast Examples (Acts Not Proper to Higher Levels) #
- If a student from Holy Cross fights a student from Assumption, it does not follow that another Assumption student should fight any Holy Cross student
- If an Italian kills an Irishman, it does not follow that an Irishman should kill any Italian
- These would be unjust because they confuse individual acts with acts of the community as a whole
Natural Acts vs. Human Acts #
- Natural acts (not subject to will and reason): Digestion, growth, nourishment, reproduction
- Example: A child grows while sleeping; he did not choose to grow, so this is not a human act
- Example: A man digesting food; not a human act in itself, though eating too much food could be (since eating is chosen)
Notable Quotes #
“Sapienti est ordinare” (It belongs to the wise to order things) — Aristotle, cited by Thomas Aquinas
“The ability for large discourse looking before and after” — William Shakespeare, on the nature of reason (cited by Berquist)
“I call acts human which proceed from the will of man according to the order of reason” — Thomas Aquinas, Commentary on Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics
“The order of the parts of an army to each other is because of the order of the whole army to its leader” — Aristotle, Metaphysics, Book 12
Questions Addressed #
How does reason relate to order? #
- Reason’s fundamental characteristic is the perception and establishment of order
- All human knowledge can be classified and organized according to the type of order it considers
- Wisdom, as the perfection of reason, is most fundamentally concerned with order
What is the relationship between a part’s order and a whole’s order? #
- The order of parts to one another exists for the sake of the order of the whole to its end
- This applies at every level: chairs, armies, families, cities, even the universe
- Understanding this relationship is crucial for understanding why different sciences are needed
Why does practical philosophy need three parts rather than one? #
- Because man participates in different communities with different ends
- The family addresses existence itself (necessities of life)
- The city addresses living well (complete sufficiency of life)
- Each different end requires separate philosophical consideration
- But all three are united by being concerned with human acts ordered to ends
How do we distinguish acts of an individual from acts of a family or city? #
- An act belongs to a whole only if it is an act proper to that whole’s end
- Not every action of a member is an action of the body to which he belongs
- Example: Obama’s private reading of Shakespeare is not an act of the U.S. government
- Example: A father’s choice to buy a safer house is an act of the family (ordered to family’s good)
- The key is whether the act is done qua member of that community (as father, as citizen)