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Hylomorphism is a metaphysical theory that explains the unity of
material objects through a special immaterial part, a ‘form’.
While contemporary accounts of hylomorphism appeal to structure,
and advocate that material substances can have other substances as
parts, James Dominic Rooney highlights the flaws in this
Neo-Aristotelian way of thinking. Instead, he draws on medieval
European and Chinese traditions to put forward that the classical
approach to the unity of material objects in terms of ‘form’
remains theoretically superior. Rooney shows how Thomas Aquinas’
account of form gives a more coherent version of hylomorphism,
eliminating the need for substance parts. He also studies the Song
dynasty Confucian thinker Zhu Xi’s hylomorphic intuition that
whatever accounts for the composition of some parts into a material
whole is a metaphysical part of that object. By appealing to the
same non-Aristotelian considerations as Zhu Xi, Rooney explains why
all those who believe in the unity of material objects will appeal
to a form, enabling hylomorphism to remain a plausible framework.
In doing so, this book shines new light on a classic philosophical
problem in contemporary metaphysics and demonstrates the
far-reaching points of theoretical contact between Western and
Confucian thought.
Hylomorphism is a metaphysical theory that explains the unity of
material objects through a special immaterial part, a ‘form’.
While contemporary accounts of hylomorphism appeal to structure,
and advocate that material substances can have other substances as
parts, James Dominic Rooney highlights the flaws in this
Neo-Aristotelian way of thinking. Instead, he draws on medieval
European and Chinese traditions to put forward that the classical
approach to the unity of material objects in terms of ‘form’
remains theoretically superior. Rooney shows how Thomas Aquinas’
account of form gives a more coherent version of hylomorphism,
eliminating the need for substance parts. He also studies the Song
dynasty Confucian thinker Zhu Xi’s hylomorphic intuition that
whatever accounts for the composition of some parts into a material
whole is a metaphysical part of that object. By appealing to the
same non-Aristotelian considerations as Zhu Xi, Rooney explains why
all those who believe in the unity of material objects will appeal
to a form, enabling hylomorphism to remain a plausible framework.
In doing so, this book shines new light on a classic philosophical
problem in contemporary metaphysics and demonstrates the
far-reaching points of theoretical contact between Western and
Confucian thought.
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