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    Scotus treats each bodily organ as a substance that conti... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Accidents of the organism's body can remain after the organism's death, even if Scotus does not posit a forma corporeitatis.

    Scotus treats each bodily organ as a substance that continues to exist for a time after the organism dies.

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    Afterlife & Death1 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Accidents that inhere in bodily organs remain as long as those organs exist.
    Substances can retain their accidents so long as the substance itself persists.

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    Scotus treats each organ of a living body as a substance with its own ...85%Accidents that inhere in bodily organs remain as long as those organs ...85%When an organism dies, the composite body as a unified entity ceases t...85%Accidents of the organism's body can remain after the organism's death...82%

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    SEP: duns-scotus
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    Scotus’s view is more complicated still, for he treats each organ of a living body as a substance (a composite of matter and substantial form). Whether Scotus also acknowledges a forma corporeitatis over and above the forms of the bodily organs is disputed (see Ward 2014, 90–93). If he does not, he must accept the unpalatable conclusion that a corpse is not the same body as the body of the organism. He can, however, avoid the conclusion that no accidents of that body remain: any accidents that i

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