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3 - Deconstructing Tradition: Substance Revisited

from Part II - From Permanence to Process

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 December 2017

Pierfrancesco Basile
Affiliation:
University of Bern
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Summary

THE MEANING OF SUBSTANCE

The label ‘metaphysics of process’ is sometimes used in antithesis to ‘metaphysics of substance’. This is not mistaken, but inaccurate. The term ‘substance’ has been used in a variety of meanings in the history of philosophy. Specifically, the term has been used to designate all of the following (the list is not meant to be exhaustive):

  • That which truly is.

  • That which is capable of action.

  • That which is always a subject of predication and never a predicate.

  • The underlying bearer of properties.

  • That which remains identical throughout change.

  • That which requires nothing else in order to exist.

  • That which is simple (that is, no substance has parts that are themselves substances).

  • That which is not affected from without.

  • In his account of the nature of the ultimate building blocks of reality, Whitehead retains the meanings (1) and (2), but rejects all others: the basic substances are power-units of sorts, capable of both acting and being acted upon. This is, he thinks, Plato's teaching in the Sophist. In Adventures of Ideas he first quotes a passage from Benjamin Jowett's translation of this crucial dialogue:

    My suggestion would be, that anything which possesses any sort of power to affect another, or to be affected by another even for a moment, however trifling the cause and however slight and momentary the effect, has real existence; and I hold that the definition of being is simply power. (Sophist, 247, as quoted in AI 119)

    Then, he comments on it as follows:

    Plato says that it is the definition of being that it exert power and be subject to the exertion of power. This means that the essence of being is to be implicated in causal action on other beings … Plato enunciates the doctrine that ‘action and reaction’ belong to the essence of being. (AI 119–20)

    The rejected notions (3)–(8), all of which can be traced back, either directly or indirectly, to Aristotle's Categories, are systematically connected. The logical notion of a substance as a subject of predication (3) has its immediate counterpart in the ontological conception of a substance as a bearer of properties (4).

    Type
    Chapter
    Information
    Whitehead's Metaphysics of Power
    Reconstructing Modern Philosophy
    , pp. 31 - 46
    Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
    Print publication year: 2017

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