Msg Base: AREA 5 - ASK FATHER CIN ECHO AMDG Msg No: 320. Tue 6-30-92 11:05 (NO KILL) (MAILED) From: Father Mateo To: Martin Morrison Subject: Aquinas on life's beginnings ÚÄ ³ I have several times heard that St. Thomas Aquinas indicated that ³ life did not begin at conception, but a few weeks afterwards. ³ However, I have not found such a statement in the Summa Theologiae. ³ Do you know whether such a statement occurs in any other work of ³ his, and, if so, what the citation is? ÀÄ[MM=>FM] Dear Martin, You will recall that Aquinas teaches that soul is the form and first principle of life in corporeal living things. (Summa Theol., I, 76, 4, reply 1). In ibid. 118, 2, reply 2, he says: ``It must be said that the soul is in the embryo: the nutritive soul FROM THE BEGINNING, then the sensitive, lastly the intellectual soul.'' In animals and man, generation and conception are synonymous, and are ``the origin of a living being from a conjoined living principle'' (ibid., 27, 2, corpus). From the moment of conception, the conceived is alive. It is not its mother, nor part of its mother--it has a distinct and unique genetic code, by which it is individuated. St. Thomas taught a succession of souls in the developing baby: nutritive, sensitive, intellectual. This is a weird notion, and unnecessary to boot. One soul will do. It merely awaits the full development of the body in order to achieve the fullness of its operation. But the presence of the spiritual, immortal soul at the moment of formation of the new genetic code establishes humanity and personhood in the child and secures and guides its development. Sincerely in Christ, Father Mateo