“Then,
from the other point of view of the good, see what a punishment ever goes with
the wicked. You have learnt a little while past that all that exists is one,
and that the good itself is one; it follows therefrom that all that exists must
appear to be good. In this way, therefore, all that falls away from the good,
ceases also to exist, wherefore evil men cease to be what they were.
“The
form of their human bodies still proves that they have been men; wherefore they
must have lost their human nature when they turned to evil-doing. But as
goodness alone can lead men forward beyond their humanity, so evil of necessity
will thrust down below the honorable estate of humanity those whom it casts
down from their first position.
“The
result is that you cannot hold him to be a man who has been, so to say,
transformed by his vices. If a violent man and a robber burns with greed of
other men's possessions, you say he is like a wolf. Another fierce man is
always working his restless tongue at lawsuits, and you will compare him to a
hound. Does another delight to spring upon men from ambushes with hidden guile?
He is as a fox. Does one man roar and not restrain his rage? He would be
reckoned as having the heart of a lion. Does another flee and tremble in terror
where there is no cause of fear? He would be held to be as deer. If another is
dull and lazy, does he not live the life of an ass? One whose aims are in
constant and ever changed at his whims, is in no wise different from the birds.
If another is in a slough of foul and filthy lusts, he is kept down by the
lusts of an unclean swine.
“Thus
then a man who loses his goodness, ceases to be a man, and since he cannot
change his condition for that of a god, he turns into a beast.”
—from
Book 4, Prose 3
Perhaps
it may be too abstract for the taste of some, but the language of Aristotle can
be of some assistance here. Understood in its most immediate way, it doesn’t
have to be complex and obscure.
The
distinction is between something being in potency,
meaning what it is able to be, and being in act,
meaning that it has now become what it is able to be. The acorn is a potential
oak, while the grown tree is an actual oak. A slab of marble is a potential
sculpture, while Michelangelo’s Pieta
is an actual sculpture. The ingredients are a potential meal, while the skill
of the chef crafts them into an actual meal.
This
can, by extension, apply to anything in creation. Only God, as complete being,
is perfect act, while all created things, subject to motion and change, as extensions
and effects of that complete being, are constantly shifting between potency and
act. It is the very process of growth, of transformation, of fulfillment. It is
all moved to return to where it started.
In this
sense, a man is only thoroughly a man when he has actualized all that it means
to be a man. In the meantime, he remains, so to speak, a man in waiting. What
is there has not yet blossomed into what it is meant to be. It is a work still
in progress.
And some
works progress, while some works regress. Sometimes there is an increase of
being, and sometimes there is a decrease of being. Given the power of reason
and choice, human beings will have control over whether they increase or
decrease. They find union with the One, or they divide themselves from the One.
When
Lady Philosophy says that a man ceases to exist as a man as soon as he follows
vice, this might seem like quite a stretch. Here, one might say, we see
philosophers spouting more of their usual nonsense. “How ridiculous, to say
that I cease to be!”
Let me
consider myself, since I should not dare to speak for anyone else. When my
thinking is plagued by ignorance, and my will is shackled by greed, and my
actions are motivated only by conformity to the pack, what might actually be
left of me?
I still
have a human body, and I still have a human mind, and I still have a human
will. Yet that body is wasting away, for the simple reason that the mind is not
working rightly at all, and the will is therefore distorted, and I end up as a
shadow of a man. I have the appearance, with none of the content.
I remain
only potentially a man, not actually a man.
Let any
animal be what it is made to be, but when any man denies his own nature as a
creature brought forth to know and to love, he degrades himself to an animal
state far lower than what he was intended for.
He is
now a shell, a dried out husk. He has withered away his potency, and so he is
no longer a man in act.
The wolf
will snarl when he is hungry, while the man will snarl when he has abandoned his
ability to love.
Written in 11/2015
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