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Rival philosophical schools compete on the nature of physical quantity. At one extreme, the Ockhamist position relegates such quantity to the status of an intrinsic mode of material substances and their sensible qualities ; for the Nominalists in general, quantity denotes no real entity in itself, but merely connotes a perspectival aspect of substances and sensible qualities, obliquely naming their co-relational condition. At the other extreme, the Cartesian position endows such quantity with so much entitative density that local extension serves as the essence of material substance, while sensible accidents are consigned to the level of mere modes of extended things. Both camps, although diametrically opposed in their views on the character of physical quantity, share a common denial that such quantity constitutes a unique category of material reality. The Ockhamist school, while retaining the distinct categories of physical substance and their ontological accidents of sensible qualities, entirely eliminates quantity as a distinct category of being. Correspondingly, the Cartesian school, by reducing material substance to res extensa and thereby elevating physical quantity to a virtual identification with material substance, conflates the two categories. At stake here is the reality of physical quantity as a category of being truly distinct from material substance, from sensible qualities, and from other accidents (particularly place). Theological ramifications also arise (especially for Eucharistic metaphysics). Can a philosophically viable middle course be traveled to steer clear of these contrary views ?

We must emphasize at the outset that we are confining ourselves to the field of philosophical cosmology ; hence, we intend to consider only physical quantity — not mathematical quantity, which can exist formally as such merely as an ideal abstraction in the mind.[1] In addition, we even exclude discrete physical quantity (a real plurality of material things subject to a standardized unit of enumeration), focusing on continuous physical quantity alone. Lastly, we prescind from continuous physical quantity insofar as it is successive (such as time and its basis in motion), fixing our attention almost solely on continuous physical quantity qua abiding or relatively permanent (hence a “static” feature of bodies). More on these distinctions later.

It seems that the topic of continuous physical quantity can fruitfully be examined only after the central hylomorphic doctrine of material substance has been established.[2] Indeed, Aristotle pursues this order of investigation in the Categories, where a chapter on quantity immediately follows his discussion of material substance. Even in the philosophical lexicon of Metaphysics Δ, quantity is treated as the first predicament after a somewhat earlier exposition of substance. Moreover, Aquinas refers to quantity as consequent upon matter,[3] and Suarez devotes two of his Metaphysical Disputations to quantity after an encyclopedic account of substance (including matter and material substance). Finally, in the thought of all three men, quantity turns out to be the proximate foundation for the remaining attributes of material substance.

Because these philosophers recommend an order of exploration eminently conducive to logical development, we shall undertake our own inquiry within the historical framework that they built. Thus, we shall commence with the ancient background pioneered by Aristotle, and thence proceed to Thomas Aquinas and Francisco Suarez (two of the greatest representatives of the Scholastic tradition in Medieval philosophy). We aim to demonstrate, with their competent assistance, that continuous physical quantity is a genus that is philosophically intelligible and really distinct from the category of substance as well as from the other accidental categories (particularly place).

Furthermore, granted that a material thing must be somehow quantified (lest it be some sort of spiritual entity), in what sense(s) must it be quantified ? What precisely are the absolutely minimal requirements for a body insofar as it is receptive to quantification ? What are the limiting possibilities of corporeality per se within the category of quantity — the ontological boundaries that cannot be transgressed without invading the realm of purely spiritual being ? In short, what is the bare essence of continuous physical quantity ?

I. Aristotle

Aristotle achieves an unprecedented philosophical advance in his insights about continuous physical quantity. Nevertheless, in the end (as we shall see) he does not succeed in fully plumbing the depths of its essence, because some key notions that he discovers to resolve the problem are insufficiently integrated, leaving too many unanswered questions.

First of all, in his Categories Aristotle never attempts to furnish an essential definition of physical quantity, but is content with a more superficial description. The relevant Chapter 6 begins with a classification of quantity into the discrete and the continuous,[4] which are discussed in turn.

Discrete quantity consists of parts having no common boundaries ; rather, the parts “are always separate”. Examples include numbers and vocal utterances.[5] Perhaps “numbers” encompass numbered entities.

Continuous quantity is composed of parts joined completely at common boundaries.[6] In Physics V, Aristotle elaborates, subsuming the continuous under the contiguous as a special case. For two things to be contiguous, it is simply required that they be ordered in such a way that they touch ; in other words, their adjacent boundaries do not necessarily merge, but may preserve their actual distinctiveness. Something is called continuous, however, when its parts are contiguous in such a way that any sequential boundaries really meld into a shared indistinguishable border ; i.e., “the touching limits of each become one and the same and are […] contained in each other : continuity is impossible if these extremities are two”. Thus, “continuity belongs to things that naturally in virtue of their mutual contact form a unity”.[7] So continuity entails contiguity which involves ordering of parts, but the converse implications do not hold, for mere order of parts does not oblige contact nor does tactile togetherness demand fusion or conjunctive unification.[8] Important instances of continuous quantities are lines, surfaces, solids, place (or space — both terms are used), and time.[9]

Since the definitions of discrete and contiguous quantity are mutually exclusive, Aristotle does wind up producing an exhaustive division from both texts taken together. But, from another angle, it would seem that the mere touching of actually demarcated parts is incidental, so that contiguous wholes as such could be aptly assimilated with discrete quantities. To the degree that a contiguous whole is composed of more basic continuous parts, a more appropriate exhaustive classification would then be the one with which Aristotle begins Categories 6 : namely, discrete versus continuous quantities.

Another dichotomy Aristotle mentions arises from quantities consisting of “parts which bear a relative position each to each, or of parts which do not”. The former class consists of quantities that are both continuous (or at least contiguous, more generally) and abide. The latter class contains quantities that are either discrete or else continuous with parts lacking an “abiding existence”. Here, where it is a question of countable pluralities or speech or time (as opposed to solids and space), only a priority of order can be distinguished.[10]

Aristotle declares that all the types of quantity delineated above, and only these, are strictly speaking quantities per se, whereas certain aspects of other predicamental realities (such as the magnitude of some surface quality or the duration of some action) are not intrinsically quantitative, but at most denominated quantities in a reductive, secondary sense.[11] Nevertheless, he himself seems to conflate categories when he imports a relation to place (external reference to other bodies) or position (internal orientation of parts) to aid his explanation of the nature of continuous quantity — thereby leading us to wonder whether the predicaments of place and posture remain distinct or whether they have been absorbed as species of quantity. Perhaps location and situation, while generically diverse from quantity, serve a peculiar role as specific differences for demarcating continuous quantity from discrete quantity.

Aristotle argues at some length that quantities (like substances) have no direct contraries. If someone objects that “large” and “small” involve such extreme opposition, Aristotle proffers the cogent rejoinder that these terms are purely relative. Nothing is large or small absolutely. Indeed, Aristotle clarifies his thesis by reminding us that he is not concerned with an “external standard”, by reference to which a quantity can vary in its magnitude depending on the rule of measure or time of comparison. Otherwise, a quantity would be simultaneously larger and smaller than itself, if we were to view it from different perspectives.[12] No, Aristotle is clearly talking about “definite quantities”, whether particular dimensions or determinate corporeal magnitudes.[13] Concisely put, “A man may contend that ‘much’ is the contrary of ‘little’, or ‘great’ of ‘small’, but of definite quantitative terms no contrary exists.”[14]

Quantity shares another characteristic with material substance, for neither admits of variation of degree. No determinate brand of quantity is more truly precisely that quantity than another,[15] just as no kind of substance is more or less that kind than another member of the same species.[16] This statement is not true of quality, which can vary in intensity at different times within the same subject or at the same time with regard to diverse subjects.[17]

Nevertheless, quantity differs from substance in a major respect. Aristotle declares, “The most distinctive mark of substance appears to be that, while remaining numerically one and the same, it is capable of admitting contrary qualities.”[18] No other mode of being can claim this ability.[19] He repeats that “one and the self-same substance, while retaining its identity, is yet capable of admitting contrary qualities.”[20] Although “substance is capable of admitting contrary qualities”[21], he intones yet again, this “capability is found nowhere else”.[22] We are forced to conclude, according to Aristotle’s asseverations, that quantity is naturally incapable of admitting contrary qualities. (This is problematic. Perhaps he means that contraries ultimately reside in the substantial subject, never being rooted in a magnitude as such.) It follows that quantity cannot be identified with substance, and hence constitutes a distinct category of reality. In particular, it is a predicamental accident of material substance. This thesis assails the Cartesian enterprise of reducing material substance to quantitative extension (see Principles of Philosophy I,53 ; II,4‑11).

Corroboration that Aristotle repudiates this mechanist reduction is found in passages of the Physics and Metaphysics where he unequivocally proposes exactly four types of change : in substance, quantity, quality, and place.[23] Obviously, if quantitative change is other than substantial change, it must belong to the genera of accidental changes. At any rate, physical quantity cannot be equated with material substance.

Additional texts in other Aristotelian works lead to the same result. In On Generation and Corruption, Aristotle shows that the quantified as such or quantity-in-general never comes to be. Rather, what is realized by growth is always material substance qua subject to definitely increased magnitude. In other words, through vital augmentation “a matter accedes” which is potentially living bodily tissue and which “also potentially possesses determinate quantity”.[24] Since substance is generated per se, it cannot be identified with its quantity.

Further support comes from Metaphysics Zeta 3, where Aristotle boldly asserts that “length, breadth, and depth are quantities and not substances (for a quantity is not a substance), but the substance is rather that to which these belong primarily.”[25] No statement could be more transparent, as well as more challenging to mechanism : continuous physical quantity is merely an accident of material substance and not its very essence.

Thus far we have been engaging primarily in an exercise of “negative quantology” : we have learned from Aristotle what quantity is not. Now we must try, in a more positive vein, to discover what quantity is. Aristotle maintains that the “most distinctive mark of quantity is that equality and inequality are predicated of it”, and this characterization is unique to quantity.[26] This feature is an interesting property applicable to all quantity (whether mathematical or physical, discrete or continuous), but we have still not captured the essence of physical quantity qua physical.

But a crucial definition awaits us in the opening sentence of Metaphysics Δ 13. There Aristotle lays down the principle that a “quantum” (which signifies a concrete quantified thing) is “that which is divisible into two or more constituent parts of which each is by nature a ‘one’ and a ‘this’”.[27]

Aristotle undoubtedly intends to capture the generic essence of quantity here, and not to adduce merely a “distinctive mark” or property, as in Categories 6. The keynotes of his formula are divisibility, multiplicity of composition, and parts which are naturally separable into entities that can exist in their own right. In order to isolate the essence of continuous physical quantity, though, we need a further specification of this divisibility-into-integral-parts, so that the result is what we intuitively expect an unbroken magnitude to mean.

Indeed, a positive clue in this direction is suggested in the last book of the Physics, where Aristotle supplies the tantalizing hint : “… what is of a certain quantity extends itself over a certain space unless something prevents it”.[28] Here the useful notion of extension makes an early manifestation in the history of cosmology, eventually provoking interminable controversy. For one thing (important in the sequel), “extension” is bi-valent : it may connote either actual location or merely an inherent tendency to occupy a place (an inclination that could be hindered). At any rate, the category of place enters the scene to inform divisibility-into-integral-parts with more specific content.

The remainder of the chapter Metaphysics Δ 13 mostly recapitulates, rather briefly, the doctrine of Categories 6. The familiar initial subdivision of quantified things is now exhibited under the rubrics of a “plurality” and a “magnitude”. The former is “that which is divisible potentially into non-continuous parts”, and hence is discrete or “numerable” (which would appear, from a certain vantage point, to subsume a merely contiguous whole). The latter, in the strict sense, is “that which is divisible into continuous parts”, and is thus “measurable” rather than countable.[29]

Nevertheless, there are some slight alterations or idiosyncratic variations here on the theme of the classification system proposed in Categories 6. Aristotle retains the basic concept of the intrinsically quantified, but now makes the relatively opposed terms (such as “much and little”), which had been adamantly banished from functioning in the role of contrariety, into “modifications”, “states”, and “attributes” of quantities themselves. Of course, this addition in no way contradicts his previous teaching. When the realities of movement and time crop up, though, Aristotle somewhat lowers their status to incidentally quantified facets, because the space on which they depend is a continuous quantity in itself (and not only the divisible material substance moving through that space). Therefore, time is no longer put on a par with space, as it seemed to be in the earlier context. The primary continuously quantified things are, consequently, material substance and space, whereas the secondary ones are local motion and time.[30]

It appears that Aristotle has unearthed most of the major ingredients for explicating the essence of continuous physical quantity. They are, however, not adequately interwoven into a clearly coherent complex. How do divisibility and spatial extension relate to each other ? Is one of them more fundamental than the other ? If so, which one, and why ? Can spatial extension itself be further analyzed ? What exactly is the role of the category of place in understanding the category of physical quantity, and how crucial is the notion of place ? We are left with many such questions, for which the Stagirite fails to provide the answers. We depart the illustrious Greek philosopher, pondering whether or how divisibility and spatial extension pertain to the essential core of a singular physical substance qua continuously quantified.

II. Aquinas

We shall see that St. Thomas does penetrate more profoundly than Aristotle the essence of continuous physical quantity. Unlike Aristotle, who is preoccupied with the divisibility description (while not entirely neglecting the notion of extension), Aquinas seems to achieve greater success by concentrating more of his attention on dimensive extension. For him divisibility is subsequent and secondary to dimensive extension. Nonetheless, within the conceptual domain of extension, Aquinas’ principal breakthrough is present only implicitly or germinally via his broadened revision in the meaning of accidental inherence. But a fully explicit treatment awaits the mind of Suarez.

Perhaps the best spot to pick up Aquinas’ treatment of quantity is his commentary on the text of Aristotle where we just left off : i.e., Metaphysics Δ 13. In analyzing Aristotle’s definition of the quantified as “what is divisible into constituent parts”, Thomas provides two additional elucidations. First, the quantitative as such excludes the kind of division found in a mixture whose elements are so inextricably dissolved that they are no longer “present in it actually, but only virtually”. Thus, mere division is not solely involved here, but also a qualitative change or an “alteration”. Second, the constituent parts must be naturally singular, demonstrable entities, thereby eliminating the metaphysical “division” of a thing into its substantial “parts” of matter and form.[31] Hence, a chemical compound has such complex unity that it surpasses the scope of the essence of quantification, whereas a hylomorphic composite taken alone has such simple unity that it falls short of admitting quantification (under the divisibility criterion). Evidently, both extremes must be avoided, according to Aquinas’ nuanced exegesis of Aristotle’s formulation.

The classification of quantity into the major broad groupings of “plurality or multitude” and “magnitude or measure” is a straightforward review of the discrete and continuous that we have already discussed.[32] Similarly, the distinction between the essentially and the accidentally quantitative needs little comment. Thomas, however, does observe the discrepancy between Aristotle’s handling of place, motion, and time in the Categories versus the Metaphysics. He easily explains the disparity, though, because in the Categories Aristotle regards place and time from the viewpoint of logic as essentially different species of quantity due to their diverse manners of measuring a magnitude, whereas in the Metaphysics he focuses totally on their being as derived from (or dependent upon) quantity and thus just incidentally quantified. Since motion is not a measure at all, Aquinas deems it (along with time) as “subsequently” quantified, receiving its character from the space through which a continuous subject passes.[33]

Some passages of Aquinas approach physical quantity from the perspective of divisibility and others incorporate the theme of dimensiveness (which seems to play the role of extension in space). We commence with propaedeutic remarks.

Thomas holds that “all continuous quantity is in matter”.[34] He does not mean to imply that form is not required. Rather, his point is that some accidents resulting from form are intrinsically independent of matter, whereas other accidents, such as quantity, are more intimately associated with material substances qua material.[35] Conversely, “no corporeal substance is without quantity”,[36] although the exact nature of this necessarily inseparable type of “quantity” remains to be clarified. In any case, material substance and quantity are somehow co-implicatory, albeit not occupying equivalent ontological ranks, since the accident of quantity inheres in a supporting physical substance. Nevertheless, these facts mandate a discursive progression of topics : first matter, then quantity.

Next, given the preceding nexus between quantity and matter, it is not surprising that Aquinas would link quantity with (passive) potentiality. At this step divisibility enters the scene.

[E]verything possessed of quantity is in a certain manner in potency. For a continuum is potentially divisible to infinity, while numbers can be increased to infinity. But every body has quantity and is therefore in potency.[37]

This divisibility that continuous quantity shares with substance is unique among all the other predicamental accidents, binding quantity more intimately to material substance :

But it must be borne in mind that of all the accidents quantity is closest to substance. […] For next to substance only quantity can be divided into distinctive parts. […] And it is for this reason that only in the genus of quantity are some things designated as subjects and others as properties.[38]

In another work Thomas repeats : “Now among accidents quantity alone has of itself the special characteristic of division.”[39]

Consequently, there is an unambiguous order of priority among the categories of physical reality. Material substance by nature precedes quantity, but quantity in turn is the secondary foundation for sensible quality (such as the common sensible of shape and the proper sensible objects specifically detectable by each sensory power alone).[40] But although the substance is the ultimate and primary subject by which an accident (such as sensible quality) is sustained, nevertheless one accident (say, a proper sensible) can inhere in a substance (say, a body) through the proximate intermediation of a prior accident (here, quantity). In an analogous sense, then, one accident is said to be the “subject” of another accident.[41]

We now encounter a complicated thicket of concepts. For divisibility is rendered possible by quantity, which is related to a condition of dimensionality, in turn bringing about the pluralization of material substances within a given species.

Matter […] is divisible only through quantity. Thus the Philosopher says[42] that if quantity were taken away, substance would remain indivisible. Accordingly, matter is made to be this and designated owing to the fact that it is subject to dimensions.[43]

We should note that the etymology of “dimension” is rooted in the Latin word for “measure” (mensura). Indeed, Aquinas declares : “What is in the genus of quantity does not have matter as one of its components, but it is related to matter as its measure.”[44] Even more stark is his pronouncement that “quantity … is the measure of substance”,[45] clearly referring to material substance alone. Synthesizing the notions of matter, quantity, dimensionality, and divisibility, Thomas writes :

Dimensions of quantity are accidents consequent to the corporeity which belongs to the whole matter. Wherefore matter, once understood as corporeal and measurable, can be understood as distinct in its various parts […].[46]

In order to comprehend Aquinas’ theory of the numerical pluralization of a species-form, we must rehearse his doctrine of prime matter. Matter, as pure formless potency, lacks any distinguishable mark whereby it could diversify a received form into the many singular members of a physical species. Thus, in order for form to be multiplied and individualized as a concrete material substance, it must be “received in this particular matter, determined to this place and this time”.[47] In short, “a form is individualized through being in matter subject to quantity”.[48] Such matter, marked (or signed) by quantity, is called “signate” matter.

On the one hand, Thomas emphasizes that quantity is a predicamental accident of material substance, as we see displayed in the ensuing two passages.

Obviously, the mathematician does not treat of the kind of body that is in the category of substance, whose parts are matter and form, but rather the body in the category of quantity, constituted by three dimensions. Body, in this sense of the term, is related to body in the category of substance (of which physical matter is a part) as an accident to its subject.[49]

[W]e find dimensions in sensible bodies, namely, length, width, and depth, which are quantities and not substances. For it is evident that quantity is not substance, but that substance is that to which the foregoing dimensions belong as their first subject.[50]

Yet, on the other hand, he appears to make quantity a predicable property of matter, naturally concomitant with it :

[D]imensive quantity seems to belong immediately to matter, since matter is divided in such a way as to receive different forms in its different parts only by means of this kind of quantity.[51]

Hence, rather than constituting the essence of quantity, divisibility is engendered by this even more primordial property of material substance. But the nature of this elusive “dimensive quantity” itself remains something of a mystery, if it is not simply identified with divisibility.

We can, nonetheless, elaborate on how matter “subject to dimensions” functions as the so-called “principle of individuation” for Aquinas, in his own words.

Now dimensions can be understood in two ways. In one way inasmuch as they are determinate, and by this I mean that they have a definite measurement and shape. In this sense, as complete beings, they are located in the genus of quantity. Now when dimensions are understood in this way they cannot be the principle of individuation, because there is often a variation in such determination of dimensions in the same individual, and thus it would follow that the individual would not always remain the same in number. In another way dimensions can be taken as indeterminate, simply as having the nature of dimensions, though they can never exist without some determination. […] Taken in this way dimensions are located in the genus of quantity as something incomplete. It is through these indeterminate dimensions that matter is made to be this designated matter, thus rendering the form individual. In this way matter causes diversity of number in the same species.[52]

Therefore, the dimensions demarcating an individual material substance from all other formally identical specimens are definite or determinate at any instant in time, but are variable (undoubtedly within an appropriate range, depending on the species) over spans of time. It is these “indeterminate” dimensions that define signate matter.

Even though prime matter is “one” as a universal, undifferentiated, sheer potency for physical substance, dimensive quantity prevents individual (or signate) matter from collapsing into a monistic unity of all generable and corruptible things.[53] But what is it precisely about dimensive quantity that enables it to exercise this office ? The explanation is propounded in the following text.

Matter is the principle of numerical diversity only inasmuch as, being divided into many parts, and receiving in each part a form of the same nature, it constitutes many individuals of the same species. Now matter can be divided only if we presuppose quantity in it ; if that is taken away, every substance remains indivisible. So the primary reason for the diversification of things of one species lies in quantity. And this is due to quantity because position, which is the arrangement of parts in place, is contained in its notion as a kind of formal difference. So even when the intellect has abstracted quantity from sensible matter, it is still possible to imagine numerically different things in the same species, for example, several equilateral triangles and several equal straight lines.[54]

Therefore, it is by virtue of “position” (situs) that dimensive quantity precludes the fusion of all material substance into the condensation of an indivisible point. As the next passage explains, dimensions can perform the role of individuation because “the arrangement of parts in place” is itself uniquely determined.

So dimensions of themselves have a certain character of being individual with reference to a definite position, position being a quantitative difference. Thus a dimension is individual on two scores : because of its subject, just like any other accident ; and also because of itself, insofar as it has position. […] So it rightly belongs to matter to individuate all other forms because it is the subject of that form which of itself has the trait of being individual.[55]

The first reason Aquinas supplies for the individuality of dimension (namely, its subject) begs the question for us, because we are attempting to discover precisely why the subject is itself distinguished from the other members of its species. If someone replies that dimensive quantity is this cause, then of course we are caught in circularity. The second reason, at first glance, may also appear to eventuate in a circular argument. For it is alleged that material substance is individuated through dimensive quantity, which in turn depends on position, which itself revolves around place.[56] Yet place, as we saw in Aquinas’ commentary on Aristotle’s Metaphysics Δ 13, hinges entitatively on quantity ! Moreover, the categories of quantity and place have become conflated according to this analysis — unsatisfactory for any faithful Peripatetic cosmology (such as the Scholastic philosophy of Thomas Aquinas).

The only way to escape the twin traps of circular reasoning and categorial merger is to attend more closely to what Aquinas has really said (and not said). Let us take serious note of the fact that, in the two preceding parallel texts cited, Thomas portrays position as a sort of “formal difference” within quantity, perhaps implying that we should conceive of continuous physical quantity as a genus, one of whose species is dimensive quantity constituted by the specific difference of position. Thus, dimensive quantity is specifically quantity having position or quantity having an ordering of parts in place. But continuous physical quantity itself, generically speaking, need not be localized. Consequently, we have averted the charge of invalid circular argumentation, while salvaging and preserving the irreducible integrity of the predicaments of quantity and place. So we know what quantity is not.

Unfortunately, we have still not captured the essence of continuous physical quantity in general. Indeed, Aristotle’s definition in terms of divisibility into separate parts suffers from the defect of unnecessary narrowness ; it leads to the specific factors of individualization and dimensionality, thereby ultimately resting on the categories of situation and place. As we have shown, unless we reject this insufficiently broad starting-point, we fall into the double-jeopardy quagmire of circularity and categorial blurring. We are forced to conclude that Aristotle’s view of physical quantity, while indisputably adequate for a vast range of phenomena, nonetheless has a too limited scope of applicability : the very definition he proposes will not bear the weight of a more profound metaphysical probing.

What further recourse remains ? Have all resources been exhausted ? We have found that we cannot take refuge in merely experiential descriptions, like divisibility into particularized segments nor dimensional extension in space. Aquinas blocks another possible avenue when he states that “addition of quantity does not add weight”.[57] That the latter judgment is correct has been verified by modern experimental physics, since it has been demonstrated that weight is entirely relative to the so-called “gravitational field” produced by a massive body. Hence, both volume (which is abstractly equivalent to tri‑dimensional extension) and weight are discarded as aspects of the formula for the quiddity of quantity.

Aquinas furnishes a small clue towards a deeper scrutiny when he avers that “all quantity consists in a certain multiplication of parts”.[58] Notice what Thomas does not say. He employs, not the word “divisibility”, but instead “multiplication”, which can be construed as a broader term, since it does not connote entitative separability of constituents. But “multiplication” without qualification would overshoot the target, because non-quantified substances (such as the spiritual human soul and angels) possess multiple “parts” (i.e., the powers of intellect and will), too, at least analogically.

To better understand the multiplicity of parts intrinsic to the physical quantity of material substances alone, we quote a very important passage drawing a key distinction between the ways in which an accident can inhere in a substance [emphasis added].

Accidents are sometimes caused in perfect actuality by the essential principles, like heat in fire, which is always actually hot. But sometimes accidents are caused only as aptitudes, and they are completed by an external agent, like transparency in the air, which is complemented by an external luminous body. In cases like these the aptitude is an inseparable accident, whereas the completion that comes from a source external to the essence of the thing, or that does not enter into its constitution, will be separable from it, like movement and other accidents of this kind.[59]

Herein appears the novel and brilliantly bold concept of aptitudinal accident. This is a philosophically viable notion, arising from reason’s reflection on sensible experience, as attested by the mundane examples Aquinas adduces. Nor does it contradict the accepted meaning of “accident”. Of course, an accident confers an actuality or perfection. But actualities or perfections are analogical, and hence need not exist in exactly the same manner. For example, in the case of the powers of living things, mainstream Scholastic philosophers (particularly Thomas himself) distinguish an ascending hierarchy of accidental perfection within certain psychic powers : the initial raw condition of remote potency, the intermediate stable disposition of proximate potency called “habit” or “first actuality”, and the final executed operations putting a power in a state of what is called “second act”.[60] Each stage is more excellent or “actual” than its predecessor.

As Aquinas indicates in the above passage, an accident may inhere to an imperfect degree — simply as an “aptitude”. Such an accident is real, is utterly “inseparable” from the substance modified, and thus is an absolutely necessary property of that substance. Yet its complete manifestation is “separable”, in the sense that its full actualization is non-essential to both the substance considered in potency to it and to the accident considered minimally in itself.

If we apply this model to continuous physical quantity, we arrive at the remarkable concept of aptitudinal dimensionality (or aptitudinal extension) as a candidate for its essence. Indeed, several times Thomas refers to the kind of quantity “tending to measure” (or having a tendency to be dimensive).[61] Anticipating an official amplification by Suarez later, we might at this point describe aptitudinal extension as a radical exigency for the part-by-part exteriorization of a physical substance — a dynamic inclination that need not be actualized in local extension. At least this notion has the virtue of being more general than full‑fledged spatial extension, yet is delimited enough so as not to impinge on the realm of immaterial (hence non‑quantifiable) substances.[62] Additionally, it offers us a coherent, intelligible resolution avoiding the quandaries entailed in the alternative explanations of physical quantity that we have witnessed (especially Aristotle’s divisibility theory).

This daring idea is not highlighted in Aristotle’s treatment of quantity, probably because he lacked the benefit of an extrinsic influence from Divine revelation. Nevertheless, we saw earlier a surprising intimation of the idea in his assertion that “what is of a certain quantity extends itself over a certain space unless something prevents it”. Aristotle may have had in mind something like the example of a fluid material, whose dimensive spread is blocked by a container. On the other hand, his statement may be construed to imply that quantity is an absolute accident whose extensive effect can be totally impeded (that is, a continuously quantified physical thing need not undergo actual extension in place at all), although Aristotle may not have been aware of this possible repercussion. By contrast, his Scholastic descendants accepted on faith (or at any rate were aware of the dogma) that in the sacrament of the Eucharist the substance of the Body of Christ is truly present, but without its normal local extension. Since His substance is corporeal, it must possess some sort of inseparable quantity ; otherwise (it seems reasonable to infer), He would be a pure spirit. Because this inseparable quantity is not an actually dimensive extension according to place, the suggestion that the essence of continuous physical quantity lies in an “aptitudinal” extension is ineluctable.

It is intriguing that this conception of accidents arises in a purely philosophical context, yet is thoroughly consonant with (and foundational for) some of Aquinas’ theological writings (namely, his disquisition on Eucharistic physics). We do not claim, though, that Thomas himself ever explicitly employs the nomenclature of “aptitudinal extension”. Rather, what we do maintain is that Aquinas implicitly uses the basic kernel of this notion : it can be teased out of his writings.[63] In particular, as we noted before, Thomas refers several times to a kind of quantity that has a tendency toward mensuration. The specific terminology of “aptitudinal extension”, however, becomes the centerpiece of Suarez’s thesis on the essence of continuous physical quantity, as we shall see.

III. Suarez

En route to his final illumination of the essence of continuous physical quantity, Suarez expends most of his energy engaging the Nominalists in some dense and often abstruse debates. But he begins his Disputation on continuous quantity with a painstaking analysis of Aristotle’s description in Metaphysics Δ 13.

He first observes that Aristotle, wherever he lists the highest genera of reality (whether in the Categories, the Metaphysics, or elsewhere), always grants quantity preeminent rank among the predicamental accidents, because, with respect to our knowledge as starting from corporeal things, quantity is prior and fundamental to the other accidents. In the Categories, however, Aristotle forgoes an attempt at a general definition, but instead immediately subdivides quantity into its continuous and discrete varieties, because its essential meaning eludes capture by a universal formulation. Nevertheless, this restriction does not pose an insurmountable obstacle to understanding its nature, since the basic character of quantity is discovered in the continuous : discrete quantity is merely a multitude of continuously quantified things.[64]

Suarez quotes Aristotle’s opening sentence of Metaphysics Δ 13 according to the following rendition : “The quantified is that which is divisible into those things which are in it, of which things either each or any one of them has an aptitude for being something one and particular [or a definite individual].”[65]

He immediately anticipates several possible criticisms that may be leveled against the Aristotelian procedure and content. First, it may be objected, Aristotle proffers a quasi‑definition of the concrete quantified thing instead of quantity in the abstract, whereas it would be more suitable to explain quantity in an abstract manner. Since concrete things are called quantified in per se and per accidens senses, and since his proposition covers both, he has not penetrated to the essential core of quantity itself.[66]

Secondly, it may be objected, Aristotle’s entire formula misses the mark in two ways : (a) it fits many things that are not quantified and (b) fails to fit some things that are ordinarily deemed quantified.

Examples supporting the anterior objection (a) are hylomorphically composed substances, which are really divisible into matter and form as distinct constituents. Also, the mode of union of soul with body is divisible, as verified when a portion of the body is removed and hence a part of the union of the soul with body ; yet there remains another (partial) union of the soul with the rest of the body’s parts. Now neither type of divisibility in these instances entails quantification.[67]

On the other hand, with regard to (b), examples like the sky (celestial space) and the successive realities of motion and time show that some quantified things are not divisible according to Aristotle’s criterion, since their “parts” are either not particular entities (in the case of space) or abiding individuals (in the case of motion and time). Lastly, number is quantified, but not divisible, since it is already actually divided.[68]

Notwithstanding these arguments, Suarez undertakes a defense of Aristotle’s teaching by refuting each objection in turn. First, Suarez insists that Aristotle’s description is sufficient and the best possible one, considering his intention, for in the whole book of Metaphysics Δ his purpose is simply to clarify the meanings of terms rather than uncover the essences of the things signified. Moreover, via this a posteriori approach commencing from the concrete and familiar, we gain some access to the abstract cause (quantity itself) through its effects (the divisibility characterizing quantified things).[69] In addition, Suarez explains, the exposition of quantified things in the concrete is adequate for elucidating the abstract meaning of quantity, because quantity has the peculiar attribute that (like the physical substance which it renders quantified as an inherent form) it itself is “quantified” in the sense of being extended and divisible ; indeed, quantity cannot extend something else unless it is co‑extensive with it — its own “parts” corresponding to the parts of its substrate. Thus, insofar as quantity (the form by which) and the material substance (the subject which) coincide in the property of possessing parts locally excluding other parts, they can be concretely identified.[70]

Before responding to the second set of paired objections, (a) and (b), Suarez makes a point already noted by Aquinas : namely, that the things into which a quantified being is divisible must be formally present in it and not merely virtually, as happens with the elements in a complete mixture. Mere division does not serve to actualize the parts as individual substances in this instance, even though a mixture is (somehow) resolvable into its elements.[71] Genuine continuous quantification requires that the components be able to exist as singular, definite wholes in their own right, separate from all the other parts. (This fact implies that the divisibility of a quantified thing is a potentially infinite process ; if it could end, it would terminate in non-quantified items, but this properly pertains to discrete quantity alone.)[72]

Now Suarez returns to address the aforementioned criticisms. First, concerning (a), it is patently true that a hylomorphic compound as such is not strictly divisible, because, although matter and form are its constituents, they lack the aptitude after separation to endure as determinate individuals. Indeed, certainly the form is lost (speaking generally and according to the natural workings of things) ; and, even in the exceptional instance of the spiritual human soul, the matter does not remain per se but instantaneously acquires new form(s).[73] Regarding the other alleged counter‑example about modes of union, Suarez replies that there is no question here of material divisibility. Such modes can vary in intensity, but not be properly divided in the sense that after division two or more of these purportedly plural modes of union could retain their separate identities relating the soul simultaneously to most of the body and also to excised portions of it.[74] Thus, it is false that the divisibility test is met by non‑quantified things. If something is not quantified, then to that degree it is not divisible.[75] By contraposition, whatever is divisible as such is quantified.

As for the converse (which addresses the last objection (b) in the series), Suarez rebuts the purported disproof invoking the heavens, by drawing a distinction. He says that something can be divisible in two ways : first, in an extramentally practical manner, and secondly, by a mental designation. Obviously, the first sense does not pertain to the very essence of a quantified thing, but the divisibility entailed in quantification must include the second meaning, because in any quantified thing one part outside another can always be indicated. Hence, a quantified thing, by virtue of its quantity, is divisible in itself and sometimes even in reality. Nevertheless, since we are now dealing with the extension of a continuous quantity, a quantified thing, on account of the matter or subject in which the quantity exists, may not be actually divisible. The latter state of affairs holds in the case of the sky, which is, after all, merely an expanse among cosmic bodies. But still, this quantified reality is virtually divisible, whether by the mind’s designation of its sectors or at least by the Divine power.[76]

Concerning successive realities, Suarez answers that, since they are quantified per accidens and since parts inhere in a quantified thing in a manner proportionate to the being of the thing, it necessarily follows that the “parts” of motion and time exist therein successively. He concludes that these quantified wholes are still (proportionately) divisible into their ephemeral “parts”, at least by a mental consideration.[77]

Before providing a rejoinder to the objection about number, Suarez briefly treats the customary subdivision of quantity into magnitude (that which is conjoined in continuous parts) and multitude (that which is divisible into discrete or non-continuous parts).[78] But we have already sufficiently confronted this dichotomous classification.

Now Suarez appeals once again to division by a mental process. Indeed, the intellect can separate the unities comprising a number, in accordance with an ordering of parts related to the totality. Hence, a number is potentially divisible by discrete division, even though it is already actually divided when viewed from the perspective of continuity. So the divisibility of continuous quantity is of a different nature from that of discrete quantity.[79] After all, the parts into which a physical magnitude is divisible are really substantial beings, whereas a numerical whole has merely ideational components which, nonetheless, are in some sense determinate singulars.

Suarez has therefore established to his current satisfaction that everything quantified is truly divisible (in its own way or analogously). Combining this result with the previous conclusion, we logically deduce that a thing is quantified if and only if it is divisible (meeting the stringent requirements articulated in Aristotle’s formula which opens Metaphysics Δ 13). For all the troublesome arguments assailing Aristotle’s quasi‑definition have been refuted via the detailed vindication launched by Suarez.[80] It remains to be seen, though, whether the descriptive definition of quantity offered by Aristotle in his lexicon of terms in book Δ lays bare the essence of physical quantity according to Suarez’s final thought. Or perhaps there is latent in Aristotle’s formulation, as translated by Suarez, more than the Greek philosopher appreciated or suspected.

In the next section of this Disputation, Suarez’s principal aim is to demonstrate rigorously the reality of continuous quantity and especially the real distinction between continuous physical quantity and bodies.[81] His chief opponents are the Nominalists, whose identification of continuous physical quantity with the very entity of material substance he undertakes the task of demolishing. They claim that bodies and even corporeal qualities have per se (through their very entities themselves) their own proper extensions of parts : quantity is merely a label under which material substances or sensible accidental forms are considered insofar as they are viewed as possessing diverse parts. From this perspectivist interpretation advocated by Nominalism, it follows that there are as many “quantities” as there are distinct material entities within a physical composite ; moreover, these quantities interweave to the degree that the material forms, with which they correspond, do.[82] A major proponent of this theory is, of course, William of Ockham.

Suarez immediately detects some ambiguity in this school of thought, because, although they explicitly deny a real distinction between quantity and material substance, they are unclear about whether they embrace some sort of distinction (whether modal or merely a major distinction of reason) within the physical thing. Yet this haziness conflicts with their affirmation that sometimes a physical substance can exist without its proper quantity (e.g., the Body of Christ in the Sacrament of the Eucharist).[83]

Suarez recounts several of the main Nominalist arguments for their view on the nature of quantity. (A) First, the Nominalists invoke the canon of philosophical economy (the so‑called principle of “Ockham’s razor”) that explanatory entities must not be multiplied beyond necessity. They reason from this premise that, since every real being is already distinguished from every other real being through itself, by the very fact that a thing is understood to have one part outside another (whether locally or just entitatively) quantity is automatically entailed : no really distinct accident is required.[84] (B) Second, if quantity were something ontologically distinct from material substance, the almighty power of God could separate them and conserve a physical substance without that quantity ; yet the substance conserved in this manner would remain intrinsically quantified (its diverse parts not coalescing), and so it is impossible that quantity be a reality distinct from such substance.[85] (C) Third, a related objection is that God could reduce a material substance to an arbitrarily minuscule size, ultimately to an indivisible point, while preserving all its accidental forms ; in this event, however, the substance would no longer be quantified, showing that quantity is not a really distinct accident.[86] (D) Fourth, Ockham appeals to Aristotle’s teaching in the Categories that substance through itself can receive contrary qualities ; hence, employing his precept of parsimony, he finds no need to posit an intermediary accident of quantity, because substance could receive qualities immediately without the superfluous supposition of real quantity.[87]

Before continuing, let us concede that the above Nominalist arguments are formidable. Nevertheless, the first three seem to beg the question (or ignore the issue) of the core essence of continuous physical quantity by assuming that such quantity should be construed in a maximal (or full-fledged) sense, rather than a minimal (or absolute) sense. The fourth objection makes an unwarranted assumption about the way in which material substance sustains material qualities, but perhaps this is an inevitable result of the incautious wielding of a merciless philosophical weapon while neglecting the other blade of the two‑edged sword : namely, the law of sufficient reason, taken in balanced counterpoise with Ockham’s sharp foil.

Suarez will return to combat these four assaults later, but meanwhile he parries the Nominalist attack with the shield of the contrary position espoused, according to his citations, by such notable philosophers and theologians as Albert the Great, Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and Capreolus. For specific counter‑arguments, however, he relies on Aristotle, who, in numerous texts from the Categories, the Physics, and the Metaphysics, distinguishes quantity from substance as an accident inhering in it. Suarez explicitly quotes the transparent passage from Zeta 3, which we have already seen.[88] Yet Suarez does not confine himself solely to reciting ipse dixit pronouncements from mainstream authorities, without bothering to furnish some proof. He presents the forceful demonstration of Aristotle’s De Anima II,6, where the Greek philosopher declares that, while substance is merely sensible per accidens, quantity is sensible per se (the so‑called “common sensible objects” of number and size).[89] Suarez, like Aquinas, also reminds us of Aristotle’s contention (in Physics I) that substance is not divisible in itself, but only through quantity.[90]

Not content with the Greek philosopher’s apparently cogent rebuke anticipating the later Nominalist thesis, Suarez now embarks on an expedition into theological terrain. Despite his employment of what one might deem a practically incontrovertible proof by the most renowned pagan thinker of ancient times, Suarez insists that the real distinction between physical quantity and material substance cannot be adequately demonstrated by natural reason. We are convinced of its truth, he maintains, primarily on account of the dogma of the Eucharist, wherein the quantity of bread endures apart from its substance, which has been converted into the substance of the Body of Christ.[91]

Of course, acceptance (in the light of faith) of this mystery of Divine conservation of quantity without the original substance’s persistence does appear to guarantee the real distinction between physical quantity and material substance,[92] but by emphasizing the superlative value of this purely theological argument Suarez seems to be assuming at this point that a real distinction between substance and quantity almost requires their ontological separability (at least by God’s power). To this degree he is guilty of transgressing the border (however fragile it may be in spots) between the provinces of philosophy and sacred theology. Fortunately, though, he does provide a couple of key rational proofs justifying the “natural necessity” for asserting a real distinction between physical quantity and corporeal substance (although he evidently regards them as inferior from the vantage of a Christian believer).

Suarez’s first proof along this line begins with the observation that some aspects of a given material substance are extended in themselves, yet so intimately conjoined among themselves that they compenetrate, simultaneously existing in the same space without mutual interference. (From the context of the entire discussion, he is here referring to sensible qualities and perhaps the substantial form.) On the other hand, we also perceive that corporeal substances (and their integral parts) are spatially incompatible, by nature incapable of occupying the same place at the same time. Hence, this reciprocal exclusion of bodies must stem from some reality distinct from physical substance and from its qualities.[93] We infer that the source of this hindrance derives from the predicament bestowing global extension, namely quantity.

The second proof depends on the major premise that the actual extension of the parts of a material substance according to place is not identifiable with the very quantity of the substance. To establish this critical (but controversial) thesis, Suarez initially reverts to invoking the Eucharistic mystery, which discloses the Body of Christ truly present physically and therefore with material quantity, yet lacking actual local extension. Happily, he does not stop with this appeal to faith in a religious dogma, but proceeds to supply an argument strictly from human reason (though shored up by the probative force of the extrinsic influence emanating from Divine revelation). He maintains that the spatial presence of a body is in reality founded on situational extension ; thus, the presence itself is extended and quantified per accidens. Nonetheless, this presence is not quantity itself, for quantity abides the same, even if the body changes its presence and hence the foundational ordering of parts in relation to place. (It seems obvious Suarez is correct about bodies that display a certain plasticity or elasticity ; but to some degree all bodies can undergo deformation, and hence a change in situation, without losing any of their intrinsic quantity.) Having decided that quantity really differs from actual local extension, Suarez concludes that quantity is a reality intermediate between physical substance and situational extension.[94]

In both proofs Suarez has evidently shown a real distinction between material substance and quantity conceived as an accident conferring actual local extension — not between substance and quantity understood in some other (still to be elaborated) sense that may be more essential. One wonders why he does not utilize a simpler proof based on the augmentation in size of living things (the customary example of quantitative change), if he merely wants to deduce a real distinction between physical substance and actual local extension. At any rate, that there truly exists an intermediary accident of quantity distinct from both material substance and situational extension has not been definitively demonstrated up to this stage.

He does hint at another approach to quantity in the sequel, when he anticipates a possible Nominalist rejoinder that aptitudinal local extension, then, should be identified with physical substance. In order to refute this claim, however, Suarez again resorts to the paradigm of the Eucharist, setting up a dilemma for the Nominalists, each horn of which leads to a contradiction of their professed positions on the nature of quantity and its relation to bodies.[95] This maneuver, once its dogmatic underpinning is postulated, does imply the reality of a predicamental quantity distinct from the extremes of pure unextended material substance and actual local extension. Unfortunately, it suffers from the defect of a recourse to an extra‑philosophical principle. This tendency of Suarez to stray from the domain of rational metaphysics is unnecessary for validating certain crucial theses, in view of an upcoming section of his treatise. Perhaps the temptation is too strong to resist on account of the ease and usefulness of the theological illustration. Again, when menaced by the Nominalists with a distinction of reason alone between aptitudinal extension and physical substance, he blocks their attempted escape route with an admixture of more dialectical (or ad hominem) refutation plus the mystery of the Blessed Sacrament.[96]

We now summarize Suarez’s rebuttals to the four main Nominalist arguments initially outlined — labeled (A), (B), (C), (D).

(A) First, although Suarez concedes that matter contains parts entitatively distinct through their very selves, he denies that something is quantified solely by virtue of the fact that its parts occupy distinct partial spaces, but rather because they necessarily demand of themselves such local extension. Indeed, even incorporeal beings (like angels) are capable of existing in diverse spaces (namely, through their transitive actions on the physical world endowing them with definitive presence), yet they are certainly not quantified. It is quite another story, however, to be unable to exist naturally except in different spaces — a state of affairs pertaining to the parts of material substance and requiring quantity, for otherwise they could exist indifferently either in a single place or in a multiplicity of places. The reason why matter is so disposed as to have this natural exigency via a distinct reality (and not through itself alone) is due to the disparate functions of matter, form, and quantity. Matter per se is neither substantially informed nor accidentally qualified, and form as such bestows determinate character (absolute in the case of substantial form and relative in the case of accidental form). Both are limited to their special offices : matter with respect to potentiality and form with respect to actuality. Consequently, an entity really diverse from both matter, form, and (by implication) the composite physical substance is primarily responsible for conferring this natural inclination to spatial extension.[97] Suarez seems to have succeeded here in constructing a solid proof from pure reason for the real distinction between material substance and quantity, where the latter is construed as an accident at a lower rung than full‑fledged situational extension.

(B) Second, having admitted that God could conserve corporeal substance without quantity (understood in context as actual local extension), Suarez also grants that such a substance would retain an internal distinction, composition, and union of parts. Nevertheless, contrary to the Nominalists, these things would not suffice for the substance to be quantified, since it would lack the proximate capacity to repel other bodies from the site whence its activities proceed. And if someone were to retort that this penetrability would deprive it of its materiality and render it (so to speak) angelic, Suarez repudiates this inference, because (as in (A) above) the substance would still possess the natural demand for quantitative mass — unlike a spirit having no affinity for quantity whatsoever.[98] We here encounter an equivocation in the term “quantity”, one kind being separable (at least by Divine power) and the other incapable of being subtracted from a physical substance. Of course, this entire discussion postulates an unproved premise (straddling the fence between philosophical cosmology and dogmatic theology) about the separability of bodies from actually extended quantity.

(C) As for the third Nominalist objection, Suarez responds by rejecting the assumption that all really distinct accidental forms can be preserved in a material substance without the quantified remaining. Indeed, this assertion does seem gratuitous. Moreover, if a physical substance were reduced to an arbitrarily small space, even to an indivisible point, Suarez would nonetheless ascribe quantity to it, because quantity does not mandate actual extension in space. Rather, the substance would require for its quantification only the inherent aptitude for an ordering of parts in place. (Suarez is again intimating what will be definitively established in an approaching section of the treatise about the essence of continuous physical quantity.) As usual, he buttresses his case by adducing the evidence of the Body of Christ in the Sacrament of the altar.[99]

(D) Lastly, Suarez dismisses the fourth Nominalist argument with the concise statement that substance receives contraries as their primary (or ultimate) subject, whereas quantity is their proximate subject.[100] His terse remark could be read as a remedial clarification of Aristotle’s differentiation in Categories 5-6, where we are told that quantity is not receptive of contraries, unlike substance. But Aquinas’ lengthier exegesis is more perspicuous, as we saw earlier.[101]

After this tortuous journey (with apologies to the reader), we finally reach the destination to which Suarez has been guiding us all along : namely, the essence of continuous physical quantity. We shall trace his development of this climactic theme, although we have already had previews of his resolution, thanks to the none‑too‑subtle hints interspersed among the problems discussed in previous sections.

Suarez initially reports two prevalent opinions concerning the primary meaning of quantity. The first view holds that it is what constitutes a thing per se divisible into similar parts. Some reasons justifying this position include Aristotle’s definition from Metaphysics Δ 13 and the fact that the species of quantity are gathered precisely in accordance with its various modes of divisibility (continuous quantity differing from discrete quantity because the former is divisible into parts united in a common limit, whereas the latter is divisible into things not partaking of a common limit).[102]

The second camp avers that the proper function of quantity is the extension of parts in place. The fundamental rationale on which this perspective rests is that divisibility is made possible only derivatively from the distinction of parts effected by the formal character of extension. Hence, divisibility cannot claim primacy, but there can be no prior reason why quantity has a distinction of parts since it is per se of such a nature.[103]

Suarez favors the truth of the second school in what it affirms, but believes that it undeservedly disparages the first school of thought, because some of the controversy stems from a verbal dispute. In fact, he sympathetically cites Capreolus (a proponent of the first position) as drawing a distinction between two senses of division : separation of parts from each other and mutual negation of parts by each other. Capreolus had denied that divisibility in the first sense is the essence of physical quantity, but had approved it in the second sense. Indeed, according to Suarez, extension seems nothing else than the reciprocal exclusion or otherness of parts within a material substance. Consequently, divisibility is the same as extension regarding the thing signified, except that the aptitude for division, regarding the manner of signifying, connotes an extrinsic denomination. So he concludes, in eventual agreement with the second stance, that divisibility (taken with logical rigor) does not constitute the essential meaning of quantity, but is rather a certain property of it. Yet he finally comments that even the second camp’s interpretation of quantity as situational extension arises through an extrinsic transference from our real experience or mental conception of space ; therefore, it is likewise a property (and by implication not the essence) of continuous physical quantity.[104] Suarez will not completely surrender extension, though ; he declares that the major difficulty resides in how it must be understood, insofar as it is said to pertain to the essential notion or primary formal effect of quantity.[105]

He continues his analysis by drawing a twofold distinction of his own among the parts of matter subject to quantity : one entitative and the other situal. Suarez then asserts that situal distinction indubitably arises radically from quantity, but that this is false and impossible for entitative distinction of parts.[106] His chief reason for this latter judgment is his general principle that something with a true and proper reality cannot be distinguished from another similar thing through an entity distinct from itself. Indeed, transcendental unity already makes a thing through its very self to be undivided in itself and other than what it is not. Moreover, distinction between two realities via a third entity would instigate an infinite regress. It follows that the entitative parts of matter are not distinct on account of quantity, but through themselves alone.[107] Thus, matter in and of itself has a multiplicity of parts but does not have extension, unless we agree to use the term “extension” in a broad sense by speaking of it as “entitative” or “substantial”.[108] In typically Suarezian fashion, he confirms his new distinction in the Eucharistic Sacrament, where the Body of Christ contains, beyond the substantial distinction of the parts of matter, a quantitative extension of parts which are ordered among themselves but not in place.[109] This sublime theological doctrine does not as such enter his demonstration (which explicitly depends on his theories of matter[110] and of distinction[111]), but it certainly performs an obliging service for Suarez.

After all the meanderings of his preceding explorations (together perhaps with an inductive process of elimination), Suarez at last unhesitatingly avers that the extension which quantity confers consists in this : the thing affected by quantity is innately empowered to have extension of parts in relation to place.[112] Thus, he says, there are three kinds of extension : entitative (which does not pertain to the effect of quantity as such, but can be found among the parts of substance and quality without quantity), local or actual (which is posterior to quantity), and aptitudinally situal (which is the formal meaning of quantity).[113] We recall that Suarez had planted clues along the road. For instance, in his altercation with the Nominalists, he had referred to a type of quantity as that extension which a body has in itself by reason of which it is apt to occupy this or that space and to have this or that situation of parts : in other words, an extension which can be called “aptitudinal” with respect to place.[114] Later he had made the transparent proposal that quantity is not actual extension in space, but rather aptitudinal extension.[115]

Should someone protest that this formula does not enunciate the essence of quantity any more than aptitudinal divisibility, Suarez replies that we have achieved enough if we can clarify the essence through that property which is first among all and closest to a given thing, because the human mind can seldom explain the essences of things insofar as they exist in themselves. Besides, Suarez answers, he is not claiming that the essence of quantity resides in the aptitude for expelling or resisting another body lest it invade the same space, because this is indeed rightly counted among the properties of quantity. Instead, he is proclaiming that the essential character of quantity lies in being an inherent form bestowing corporeal mass or extension on material substances ; but what it means to have corporeal mass we cannot articulate except through an ordination to this effect, whereby another body is apt to be excluded from occupying the same space simultaneously. Consequently, continuous physical quantity is a form endowing a body with the disposition for situational extension — which is the sole per se, absolutely necessary, proper and primary effect of quantity (even though we can boast no direct intellectual intuition into this form).[116]

Now someone might pursue the Nominalist thesis that matter through its entity, without quantity, has the capacity and aptitude for local extension. Hence, such a person would argue, this sort of extension cannot be the formal effect of quantity.[117] Another might counter, however, that if quantity were removed, then extension could not remain in the parts of matter, since those parts would not retain any order among themselves ; a fortiori they could not retain an ordination to place.[118] Suarez seems to alter this reply, though, in accordance with his theory of matter : namely, entitative extension would perdure in the substance, but not actual local extension. Yet, because material substance and the affinity for local extension are so intimately connected, the latter affinity will necessarily remain, and so the assumption that quantity in the strict minimal sense is removable must be denied. Nevertheless, the Nominalist equation of the two does not follow, because physical substance and quantity (even in its absolutely essential meaning) are “diverse realities” with intrinsically distinct effects identifying them.[119]

Suarez broaches the problem of rarefaction and condensation — processes in which apparently the same quantity, without gain or loss of matter, occupies a greater or lesser volume. Someone could therefore deny that the formal effect of quantity consists in the radical extension of parts in ordination to place or the tendency for so affecting each other that they can exercise reciprocal exclusion from the same space. Suarez admits that the way in which these events occur is a difficult physical question. Hence, he refuses to enter a cursory discussion here over how they happen. Nonetheless, although he sidesteps an explanation of the manner of occurrence, he holds that there is nothing incongruous with his theory of the essence of quantity. Quantity still plays the role of extending substance and giving it corporeal mass, but without determining a definite limit in relation to the space which the substance becomes capable of filling. Thus, quantity remains the accidental form bestowing aptitudinal extension on material substance.[120] This seems to be a satisfactory general answer consonant with an appropriate level of philosophical abstraction. The details can be left to experimental physics or chemistry.

Suarez concludes that whatever quantity has exists for the sake of substance and on account of substance. Quantity is instituted primarily for endowing physical substance with the property that it consist of parts which by nature expel each other from simultaneous occupation of the same space, and this attribute is then communicated to material forms and other corporeal accidents.[121] So, despite his spirited defense (within the disputation’s opening section) of Aristotle’s description of quantity in terms of divisibility, it turns out that Aristotle’s formula merely encapsulates or enshrines a property of dimensive quantity or actual local extension — it does not isolate the essence of continuous physical quantity. The philosophical basis for Suarez’s definition is rather to be found in Aquinas’ germinal idea of aptitudinal accidents near the close of De Ente et Essentia.[122]

As a final tie-in between quantity and matter, let us mention Suarez’s explicit avowal that they mutually imply each other : every material composite is necessarily quantified and every quantified substance is necessarily composed of matter. Since they are inseparable concomitants, there must be some natural connection between them. Now, the essence of matter is potency to form ; described negatively, it is formless in itself, lacking active power, ingenerable and incorruptible, and unknowable directly. Hence, quantity is compared to matter as a property of it, because the above characterizations display matter as substance, thus making quantity an accident. Consequently, their nexus is a non‑reciprocal dependence, whereby quantity is rooted in the foundation of material substance. Nevertheless, quantity is a true and real property having an entity of its own, though naturally and necessarily conjoined with the entity of matter.[123] It is unclear in what sense Suarez is taking quantity here, but, considering the overall architecture of his work, we would have to interpret it according to its minimal essential meaning of aptitudinal extension (as dictated by the foregoing development).

IV. Summary

Suarez reaches some conclusions about the essence of continuous physical quantity that are totally consistent with those of Aquinas, but much more explicitly elaborated (with no grounds for charges of vagueness). Thomas would undoubtedly concur with Suarez that continuous physical quantity is an absolutely inherent accident of material substance, really distinct from it, and conferring on it aptitudinal extension or the propensity for the ordering of parts in place. Aquinas would evidently also accept the following salient Suarezian rejoinder to the Nominalist reduction of quantity to a mode of physical substance and proper sensible qualities : namely, that local extension (fully actualized quantity) functions as a proximate quasi-subject imparting differentiation yet cohesiveness to relatively tenuous sensible qualities, which otherwise would be compenetrated by other material substances or merely exhibit a nebulous association among themselves.[124] Moreover, they agree, quantity can fulfill this task because it is itself somehow (unlike the other predicamental accidents) intrinsically individuated — although Suarez risks circularity when he calls quantity itself quantified (thereby conjuring up the possible threat of an infinite regress of forms by which the previously quantified reality is rendered so).

It may appear that Suarez’s intrusion of an article of religious revelation into his discussion of the real distinction between material substance and physical quantity constantly imperils the contours of philosophy. Indeed, a certain tension persists between philosophy and sacred theology here. But theology plays chiefly an extrinsic role, as befits the rightful arenas of the two disciplines.[125] Nevertheless, the tenet that the minimal absolute requirement for continuous physical quantity (hence its essence) consists in aptitudinal extension is ultimately vindicated by the doctrine of the Eucharist. Consequently, dogmas of faith (even if only entertained as possibilities and not embraced as assumptions) can fuel human thought, offering clues to (and perhaps shedding additional light on) truths about the most profound ontic depths of the physical universe.[126]

In any event, categorial confusion is successfully averted via the subtle concept of “aptitudinal extension” : quantity is truly other than place. There seems, however, to be an unavoidable degree of categorial circularity in the endeavor to describe these supreme genera of physical reality. For quantity depends in some way (if only tendentially) on position and therefore place, yet physical place (and hence position or situation) depends ontologically on material substance qua quantified.[127] Perhaps we have gained insight into a categorial “circumincession” among the triad of material substance, physical quantity, and place — a dim and remote analogy mirroring the mutual indwelling of the three Persons of the Blessed Trinity at the summit and source of all being.