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Bilocation
(Latin bis, twice, and
locatio, place.)
I. The question whether the same
finite being (especially a body) can be at once in two
(bilocation) or more (replication, multilocation) totally
different places grew out of the Catholic doctrine on the
Eucharist. According to this Christ is truly, really, and
substantially present in every consecrated Host wheresoever
located. In the endeavour to connect this fact of faith with the
other conceptions of the Catholic mind theologians make the
following distinctions:
A being is definitively in place
when it is entire in every portion of the space it occupies. This
is the mode of location proper to unembodied spirits and to the
human soul in the organism whereof it is the "substantial
form", i.e. the actuating and vitalizing principle. A spirit
cannot, of course, be in loco circumscriptively since,
having no integrant parts, it cannot be in extensional contact
with the surrounding dimensions. It may be said, therefore, to
locate itself by its spiritual activity (will) and rather to
occupy than to be occupied by place, and consequently to be
virtually rather than formally in loco. Such a mode of
location cannot be natural to a physical body. Whether it can be
so absolutely, supernaturally, miraculously, by an interference
on the part of Omnipotence will be considered below.
II. That bilocation (multilocation)
is physically impossible, that is, contrary to all the conditions
of matter at present known to us, is the practically unanimous
teaching of Catholic philosophers in accordance with universal
experience and natural science. As to the absolute or metaphysical
impossibility, that is, whether bilocation involves an intrinsic
contradiction, so that by no exertion even of Omnipotence could
the same body be at once in wholly different places - to this
question the foregoing distinctions are pertinent.
Catholic philosophers maintain
that there is no absolute impossibility in the same body being at
once circumscriptively in one place and definitively elsewhere
(mixed mode of location). The basis of this opinion is that local
extension is not essential to material substance. The latter is
and remains what it is wheresoever located. Local extension is
consequent on a naturally universal, but still not essentially
necessary, property of material substance. It is the immediate
resultant of the "quantity" inherent in a body's
material composition and consists in a contactual relation of the
body with the circumambient surfaces. Being a resultant or quasi
effect of quantity it may be suspended in its actualization; at
least such suspension involves no absolute impossibility and may
therefore be effected by Omnipotent agency. Should, therefore,
God choose to deprive a body of its extensional relation to its
place and thus, so to speak, delocalize the material substance,
the latter would be quasi spiritualized and would thus, besides
its natural circumscriptive location, be capable of receiving
definitive and consequently multiple location; for in this case
the obstacle to bilocation, viz., actual local extension, would
have been removed. Replication does not involve multiplication of
the body's substance but only the multiplication of its local
relations to other bodies. The existence of its substance in one
place is contradicted only by non-existence in that same place,
but says nothing per se about existence or non-existence
elsewhere.
Regarding the absolute
possibility of a body being present circumscriptively in more
than one place, St. Thomas, Vasquez, Silv. Maurus, and many
others deny such possibility. The instances of bilocation
narrated in lives of the saints can be explained, they hold, by
phantasmal replications or by aerial materializations. Scotus,
Bellarmine, Suarez, DeLugo, Franzelin, and many others defend the
possibility of circumscriptive replication. Their arguments as
well as the various subtle questions and difficulties pertinent
to the whole subject will be found in works cited below.
BALMES, Fundamental
Philosophy (New York, 1864); DALGAIRNS, The Holy Communion
(London, 1868); FABER, The Bl. Sacrament (Baltimore, 1855);
GUTBERLET, Die Metaphysik (Münster, 1880); NYS,
Cosmologie (Louvain, 1906); LA FARGE, L'idée de
continu (Paris. 1894); PESCH, Philosophia Nat.
(Freiburg, 1897); URRABURU, Cosmologia (Valladolid, 1892).
F.P. SIEGFRIED
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