Souls, Animals and Physics

0. More on life and machines.

1. The origin of the soul.

*     Philosophers have struggled with the question of the origin of the soul.  Some have said that human souls are created by God at the beginning of the human being’s existence.  Other said that they splinter off from the souls of the parents.

*     Leibniz thinks that the very same problem is to be found with the origin of non-human souls.  The medievals thought there was a significant difference between the human soul and the soul of an animal, because the human soul is capable of apprehending universals, i.e., abstract concepts such as horse or seven, and universals are immaterial and hence they thought that the human soul had to be less tightly bound up with materiality than an animal soul, and hence there was more of a difficulty as to how it originated.  But Leibniz thinks there is only a difference in degree between different kinds of souls.

*     Leibniz sees three solutions.  Either souls come from other souls.  But that requires causation between different monads, and he doesn’t buy that.  Or God makes each soul.  But that involves constant miracles, and Leibniz doesn’t like that.  Or all the souls that exist have existed from the beginning, pre-programmed to come into fruition now.

*     Leibniz accepts that there are spermatic animals—presumably found in the sperm—which become the human beings.  These spermatic animals have their own central monads, and their central monads become the central monads of the humans.  Thus, the origin of the soul is solved: the soul has existed since the start of the universe and will always exist.

*     So, we pre-existed, as spermatic animals, our conception.  We existed when the world started.

*     Do all the spermatic animals become human?  Here’s what Leibniz writes to Bourget: “Your conjecture that every human spermatic animal in the end comes to be rational is ingenious;  but I do not see it at all as necessary.   If many of them should remain simple animals, there would be no evil at all in that.” (G III, p. 579.)

*     This theory may seem to be ethically problematic.  Suppose I was once such a creature, then were you to have hurt or harmed such a creature, you would have been hurting or harming me.  And that surely would be just as wrong as hurting or harming me now—the victim is the same.  We were somewhere in Leibniz’s time.  Where?  Maybe in the testicles of our ancestors along the male line.  It would have been wrong to harm us back then.  Suppose now that in fact things turned out a little differently and we had never developed into full rational beings, but stayed at the level of spermatic beings—maybe someone further down the line just never had any children.  Hurting us wouldn’t have been any less of an evil back then, just because we wouldn’t develop.  After all, it would be the same kind of a victim, still.  How evil it is to hurt someone doesn’t depend on what will happen to the individual in the future: it just depends on the individual’s present and past states. 

*     This has the following absurd consequence: Cremation of men is wrong, and one has a duty to rescue a corpse from a fire even at significant risk of bodily injury.  For if you cremate a man, presumably you hurt all the spermatic animals in his testicles.  These spermatic animals are beings just like we used to be.  If it was wrong to hurt us back then—as it surely was since it was we—then it is wrong to hurt them.  Of course, one might insist that the spermatic animals don’t feel any pain when they are cremated.  They are very small, of course.

*     But now consider something else.  Maybe by not feeding me certain nutrients, my parents could have arrested my intellectual development in childhood.  If so, then they would have done wrong.  We need to supply people with whatever they need for full human development.  If my parents failed to give me these nutrients, they would have deprived me of intellectual development, and that is wrong.  But now suppose instead a different thing.  My great-grandfather, along the male line, decided never to reproduce.  Then, this would have also deprived me of intellectual development: I existed in him, and he would have neglected to give me intellectual development.  The harm to me would have been even greater than if my parents failed to nourish me, since if my intellectual development were stunted, I still would have had some intellect, while if my great-grandfather had never reproduced, my intellectual development would not have occurred at all.  Thus, it seems that Leibniz’s theory not only implies that contraception is wrong—there is nothing absurd about that, and like every other Christian in his time he probably thought that—but that abstinence in marriage is wrong, and indeed that one ought to have as many children as one can possibly physically have, because otherwise one is holding back spermatic animals from the fullness of their intellectual development.

*     Leibniz, however, would disagree with the above absurdity-finding.  For, Leibniz might well say that we had no rights when we were spermatic animals.  Even though metaphysically, the spermatic animals had the same souls as we do, they were not morally the same individual.  Recall how I started the argument: The spermatic animal back then was I.  But for moral identity, Leibniz thinks one needs to have a psychological continuity of memory.  So morally that animal was not I.

2. Appetitions, perceptions and final causes.  Freedom as bound up with final causes.

3. Mechanism.

4. Bipartite.