We have seen St Thomas distinguish metaphor from the proper use of
a term and clearly we can understand the meaning of improprie only if a meaning
of proprie be
established. Now metaphorical usage is distinguished from the
variety of meanings of a term which refer to what is principally
signified by the term in question. That is, in what at least
sometimes St Thomas calls a multiplicitas
analogiae, it would seem that each meaning permits proper
usage. This may seem surprising since St Thomas distinguished the
univocal term from the analogous term by saying that,
when things are named univocally, the ratio propria is found in each of the things so
named, whereas when things are named analogically, ratio propria non invenitur nisi in
uno{1}. How can a thing be named proprie by a term whose ratio propria it does not
save? It is just this puzzle that seems to have led Cajetan to
write his incredible commentary on the passage in which our phrase
occurs; he there maintains, in direct opposition to the text
before him that in truly analogous names the ratio propria is found in all
the things named. "Esse ergo nomen aliquod secundum propriam
rationem in uno tantum, est conditio nominum quae sunt ad unum aut ab uno, etc. et non nominum
proportionaliter dictorum.{2} Cajetan thereby assigns the
distinction in the text between univocals and analogates to a new
role; now analogy in the strict sense, analogy of proper
proportionality, is grouped with univocity and opposed to analogy
of attribution. In order to separate analogy of proper
proportionality from univocation, Cajetan says that while things
named analogically in the full sense of the term all save the ratio propria of their
common name, unlike things named univocally they do not do so secundum eamdem rationem.
What prompts this prestidigitation is clear from the following
remark. "Quoniam si analogum in uno tantum secundum propriam
rationem salvatur; et ex qu. xiii constat omnia nomina communia.
Deo et aliisesse analoga, et consequenter veritatem analogice
inveniri in intellectu divino et aliis intellectibus, sequitur
quod in multis intellectibus non sunt multae veritates, sed omnes
intellectus sunt veri una sola veritate, scilicet intellectus
divini."{3} Cajetan may be taken to mean that unless the ratio propria of a word is
saved by that of which the word is said or predicated, we will be
speaking improperly and metaphorically and we see once more the
affinity of metaphor to what Cajetan calls analogy of attribution.
If Cajetan is mistaken here, and we will see that he is, the text
does demand that we look for a way in which, when things are named
analogically, the proper notion of the name is saved by only one
of them and yet the others are named properly as opposed to
improperly.
{1} Ia, q. 16, a. 6,
c.
{2} Ia Iam,
q. 16, a. 6, n. IV.
{3} Ibid.,
n. III.
© 2011 by the Estate of Ralph McInerny. All rights reserved including the right to translate or reproduce this book or parts thereof in any form.