Substance

(Lat. sub-stare, substantia)

                     Substance, the first of Aristotle's categories, signifies being as existing in and by
                     itself, and serving as a subject or basis for accidents and accidental changes.

                                  I. THE FUNDAMENTALS OF SUBSTANCE

                     Substance being a genus supremum, cannot strictly be defined by an analysis
                     into genus and specific difference; yet a survey of the universe at large will enable
                     us to form without difficulty an accurate idea of substance. Nothing is more
                     evident than that things change. It is impossible for anything to be twice in
                     absolutely the same state; on the other hand all the changes are not equally
                     profound. Some appear to be purely external: a piece of wood may be hot or
                     cold, lying flat or upright, yet it is still wood; but if it be completely burnt so as to
                     be transformed into ashes and gases, it is no longer wood; the specific, radical
                     characteristics by which we describe wood have totally disappeared. Thus there
                     are two kinds of changes: one affects the radical characteristics of things, and
                     consequently determines the existence or non-existence of these things; the
                     other in no way destroys these characteristics, and so, while modifying the thing,
                     does not affect it fundamentally. It is necessary, therefore, to recognize in each
                     thing certain secondary realities (see ACCIDENT) and also a permanent
                     fundamentum which continues to exist notwithstanding the superficial changes,
                     which serves as a basis or support for the secondary realities -- what, in a word,
                     we term the substance. Its fundamental characteristic is to be in itself and by
                     itself, and not in another subject as accidents are.

                     The Scholastics, who accepted Aristotle's definition, also distinguished primary
                     substance (substantia prima) from secondary substance (substantia secunda):
                     the former is the individual thing -- substance properly so called; the latter
                     designates the universal essence or nature as contained in genus and species.
                     And, again, substance is either complete, e. g. man, or incomplete, e. g. the
                     soul; which, though possessing existence in itself, is united with the body to
                     form the specifically complete human being. The principal division; however, is
                     that between material substance (all corporeal things) and spiritual substance, i.
                     e. the soul and the angelic spirits. The latter are often called substantiœ
                     separatœ, to signify that they are separate from matter, i. e. neither actually
                     conjoined with a material organism nor requiring such union as the natural
                     complement of their being (St. Thomas, "Contra Gentes", II, 91 sqq.). St.
                     Thomas further teaches that the name substance cannot properly be applied to
                     God, not only because He is not the subject of any accidents, but also because
                     in Him essence and existence are identical, and consequently He is not included
                     in any genus whatever. For the same reason, it is impossible that God should be
                     the formal being of all things (esse formale omnium), or, in other words, that one
                     and the same existence should be common to Him and them (op. cit., I, 25, 26).

                     In the visible world there is a multitude of substances numerically distinct. Each,
                     moreover, has a specific nature which determines the mode of its activity and at
                     the same time, through its activity, becomes, in some degree, manifest to us.
                     Our thinking does not constitute the substance; this exists independently of us,
                     and our thought at most acquires a knowledge of each substance by considering
                     its manifestations. In this way we come to know both the nature of material
                     things and the nature of the spiritual substance within us, i. e. the soul. In both
                     cases our knowledge may be imperfect, but we are not thereby justified in
                     concluding that only the superficial appearances or phenomena are accessible to
                     us, and that the inner substantial being, of matter or of mind, is unknowable.

                     Since the close of the Scholastic period, the idea of substance and the doctrines
                     centring about it have undergone profound modifications which in turn have led to
                     a complete reversal of the Scholastic teaching on vital questions in philosophy.
                     Apart from the traditional concept formulated above, we must note especially
                     Descartes' definition that substance is "a being that so exists as to require
                     nothing else for its existence". This formula is unfortunate: it is false, for the idea
                     of substance determines an essence which, if it exists, has its own existence
                     not borrowed from an ulterior basis, and which is not a modification of some
                     being that supports it. But this idea in no way determines either the manner in
                     which actual existence has been given to this essence or the way in which it is
                     preserved. The Cartesian definition, moreover, is dangerous; for it suggests that
                     substance admits of no efficient cause, but exists in virtue of its own essence.
                     Thus Spinoza, following in the footsteps of Descartes declared that "substance is
                     that which is conceived in itself and by itself", and thence deduced his
                     pantheistic system according to which there is but one substance -- i. e. God --
                     all things else being only the modes or attributes of the Divine substance (see
                     PANTHEISM). Leibniz's definition is also worthy of note. He considers substance
                     as "a being gifted with the power of action". Substance certainly can act, since
                     action follows being, and substance is being par excellence. But this property
                     does not go to the basis of reality. In every finite substance the power to act is
                     distinct from the substantial essence; it is but a property of substance which can
                     be defined only by its mode of existence.

                                     II. THE REALITY OF SUBSTANCE

                     The most important question concerning substance is that of its reality. In
                     ancient days Heraclitus, in modern times Hume, Locke, Mill, and Taine, and in
                     our day Wundt, Mach, Paulsen, Ostwald, Ribot, Jodi, Höffding, Eisler, and
                     several others deny the reality of substance and consider the existence of
                     substance as an illusory postulate of naive minds. The basis of this radical
                     negation is an erroneous idea of substance and accident. They hold that, apart
                     from the accidents, substance is nothing, a being without qualities, operations,
                     or end. This is quite erroneous. The accidents cannot be separated thus from the
                     substance; they have their being only in the substance; they are not the
                     substance, but are by their very nature modifications of the substance. The
                     operations which these writers would thus attribute to the accidents are really the
                     operations of the substance, which exercises them through the accidents.
                     Finally, in attributing an independent existence to the accidents they simply
                     transform them into substance, thus establishing just what they intend to deny. It
                     can be said that whatever exists is either a substance or in a substance.

                     The tendency of modern philosophy has been to regard substance simply as an
                     idea which the mind indeed is constrained to form, but which either does not
                     exist objectively or, if it does so exist, cannot be known. According to Locke
                     (Essay ii, 23), "Not imagining how simple ideas can subsist by themselves, we
                     accustom ourselves to suppose some substratum wherein they do subsist and
                     from which they do result; which therefore we call substance; so that if any one
                     will examine himself concerning his notion of pure substance in general, he will
                     find he has no other idea. of it at all, but only a supposition of he knows not what
                     support of such qualities, which are capable of producing simple ideas in us;
                     which qualities are commonly called accidents." He protests, however, that this
                     statement refers only to the idea of substance, not to its being; and he claims
                     that "we have as clear a notion of the substance of spirit as we have of body"
                     (ibid.). Hume held that the idea of substance "is nothing but a collection of
                     simple ideas that are united by the imagination and have a particular name
                     assigned to them, by which we are able to recall, either to ourselves or others,
                     that collection" (Treatise, bk. I, pt. IV); and that the soul is "a bundle of
                     conceptions in a perpetual flux and movement".

                     For Kant substance is a category of thought which applies only to phenomena, i.
                     e. it is the idea of something that persists amid all changes. The substantiality
                     and immortality of the soul cannot be proved by the pure reason, but are
                     postulated by the moral law which pertains to the practical reason. J. S. Mill,
                     after stating that "we may make propositions also respecting those hidden
                     causes of phenomena which are named substances and attributes", goes on to
                     say: "No assertion can be made, at least with a meaning, concerning those
                     unknown and unknowable entities, except in virtue of the phenomena by which
                     alone they manifest themselves to our faculties" (Logic, bk. i, I, c. v): in other
                     words, substance manifests itself through phenomena and yet is unknowable.
                     Mill defines matter as "a permanent possibility of sensation", so that no
                     substantial bond is required for material objects; but for conscious states a tie is
                     needed in which there is something "real as the sensations themselves and not a
                     mere product of the laws of thought" ("Examination", c. xi; cf. Appendix). Wundt,
                     on the contrary, declares that the idea (hypothetical) of substance is necessary
                     to connect the phenomena presented in outer experience, but that it is not
                     applicable to our inner experience except for the psycho-physical processes
                     (Logik, I, 484 sqq.). This is the basis of Actualism, which reduces the soul to a
                     series of conscious states. Herbert Spencer's view is thus expressed:
                     "Existence means nothing more than persistence; and hence, in mind, that
                     which persists in spite of all changes, and maintains the unity of the aggregate in
                     defiance of all attempts to divide it, is that of which existence in the full sense of
                     the word must be predicated -- that which we must postulate as the substance of
                     mind in contradistinction to the varying forms it assumes. But, if so, the
                     impossibility of knowing the substance of mind is manifest" (Princ. of Psychol.,
                     Pt. II, c. i). ElseWhere he declares that it is the same Unknowable Power which
                     manifests itself alike in the physical world and in consciousness -- a statement
                     wherein modern Agnosticism returns to the Pantheism of Spinoza.

                     This development of the concept of substance is instructive; it shows to what
                     extremes subjectivism leads, and what inconsistencies it brings into the
                     investigation of the most important problems of philosophy. While the inquiry has
                     been pursued in the name of criticism, its results, so far as the soul is
                     concerned, are distinctly in favour of Materialism; and while the aim was
                     supposed to be a surer knowledge on a firmer basis, the outcome is Agnosticism
                     either open or disguised. It is perhaps as a reaction against such confusion in
                     the field of metaphysics that an attempt has recently been made by
                     representatives of physical science to reconstruct the idea of substance by
                     making it equivalent to "energy". The attempt so far has led to the conclusion
                     that energy is the most universal substance and the most universal accident
                     (Ostwald, "Vorlesungen über Naturphilosophie", 2nd ed., Leipzig, 1902, p. 146).

                     For the theological significance of substance see EUCHARIST. See also
                     ACCIDENT; SOUL; SPIRITUALISM.

                     BALMES, Fundamental Philosophy, II (new ed., New York, 1903); JOHN RICKABY. General
                     Metaphysics (3rd ed., New York, 1898); WALKER, Theories of Knowledge (New York, 1910);
                     HARPER, The Metaphysics of the School (London, 1879-84); MERCIER, Ontologie (Louvain,
                     1903); LORENZELLI, Philosophiœ theoreticœ institutiones (Rome, 1896); WILLEMS, Institutiones
                     philosophicœ, I (Trier, 1906); KLEUTGEN, Philosophie d. Vorzeit, II; PRAT, De la notion de
                     substance (Paris, 1903). -- See also the bibliographical references in EISLER, Wörterbuch der
                     philosophischen Begriffe, III (Berlin, 1910).

                     M.  P.  De Munnynck
                     Transcribed by Douglas J. Potter
                     Dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary

                                      The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIV
                                    Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
                                    Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
                                  Nihil Obstat, July 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
                                 Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

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