2 research outputs found
Naming and Understanding the Opposites of Desire: A Prehistory of Disgust 1598-1755.
PhDIn the early 17th century, Aristotelian ideas about the passions came under scrutiny. The
dominant, if not only, understanding of the passions before that time came from Thomas
Aquinas. Aquinas split most of his main passions into opposing pairs – love/hate, joy/sorrow,
fear/bravery etc. Aquinas described the opposite of desire as ‘fuga seu abominatio (flight or
abomination).’ Although grappled with by earlier philosophers such as Duns Scotus and Thomas
Cajetan, it was not until the 17th century that thinkers attempted to challenge Aquinas’s opposite
of desire.
This thesis looks at five writers who used a variety of terms, often taken to be near-synonyms
of disgust in the historiography – Thomas Wright, Henry Carey, 2nd Earl of Monmouth,
Thomas Hobbes, Henry More and Isaac Watts – and challenges that view. Each of these men
wrote works that, at least in part, attempted to understand the passions and each had a different
understanding of Aquinas’s opposite of desire. The thesis uses a corpus analysis to investigate
uses of the words each thinker chose as an opposite of desire and then examines each writers’
influences, experiences, and intentions, to analyse their understanding of the opposite of desire.
Secondly, these various opposites of desire appear to bare a family resemblance to modern
disgust. All are based upon the action of moving away from something thought of as harmful or
evil, and all have an element of revulsion alongside the repulsion. This has led to much of the
historiography of these sorts of passions making the assumption that these words simply referred
to disgust. This thesis argues that these opposites of desire are not the same as disgust; the
differences outweigh the similarities.Wellcome Trus