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Aquinas On Sorrow. Ancient Philosophy. Three Aspects of a Passion. A passion is an individual’s reaction to an object acting upon him The object reacting upon the individual either good or bad The effect on the subject Increases or decreases power of being and acting
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Aquinas On Sorrow Ancient Philosophy
Three Aspects of a Passion • A passion is an individual’s reaction to an object acting upon him • The object reacting upon the individual • either good or bad • The effect on the subject • Increases or decreases power of being and acting • The relation of subject and object • either pursuit vs avoidance
Sorrow • Object • present evil • good of which the evil is depriving an individual • Subject • consciousness of this deprivation • destruction of some unity • Relation of subject and object • avoidance
Three Levels of Pain • natural appetite—no consciousness • repugnant to body • sensitive appetite—consciousness, but not self-consciousness • intellectual appetite—self-consciousness • Joy and sorrow require consciousness
Four Types of Sorrow • pity=sorrow for another's evil • envy=sorry for another's good, considered as one's own evil • anxiety=a sorrow that weighs on the mind, so as to make escape seem impossible • torpor=a sorrow that sorrow that weighs down on the appetite
The Effects of Sorrow • Degrees of Depression • not so much that can oppose the evil • So much that the hope of evasion is excluded • even the interior movement of the appetite is hindered • So much even exterior motion is prevented • The individual is stupified
Remedies for Sorrow • Pleasure • Outward expression • Releases the sorrow • appropriate outward expression provides pleasure • Support from others • others helping to bear the burden of sadness • love of others provide pleasure