It is more than a semantic claim. In order for the being to become a creator it has to change from creator-to-be to creator. I note that you capitalise “Being”. This is a dead giveaway that you are reifying being into something it is not.
The being has to change in order to move from non-creator to creator. If it has changed then there must be a difference between before and after. Hence the before and after are not the same being, but different beings. When you were born you could not type on a computer. Now you can. You are different – you have changed.
Buddhism denies a soul, that is it denies any “Being” lurking behind things. We think it is there, but we are mistaken. It has as much substance as the water we see in a mirage. What we think of as a “Being” is actually a series of different beings, each one causally related to its predecessors.
Hence, my approach to “creator” is correct in Buddhist philosophy. Much Western philosophy tends to see the world as fundamentally static with a veneer of change overlaid. Buddhism reverses that. The world is fundamentally changing with a veneer of apparent stasis overlaid. The stasis is an illusion; everything changes.
In the Buddhist analysis, there is no Substance, but only Accident. Substance is merely an artefact of our mental models and has no real existence. Jorge Luis Borges expresses it well:
Not only was it difficult for him to comprehend that the generic symbol
dog embraces so many unlike individuals of diverse size and form; it bothered him that the dog at three fourteen (seen from the side) should have the same name as the dog at three fifteen (seen from the front).
–
Funes the Memorious
Since the only characteristics of an entity are Accidental characteristics, then a change in Accidental characteristics
is a change in the entity.
To elaborate the argument, I am sure you will agree that Accidental and Substantial characteristics are different. Accidental characteristics can change, while Substantial characteristics cannot (transubstantiation apart). Hence we can analyse any entity into Substance and Accident, which differ in their properties. Since a single entity cannot have opposed characteristics, it cannot be both changeable and unchangeable at the same time, then we do not have one entity but two separate entities. Now we can proceed to separately analyse the two entities.
A creator who has created nothing is not a creator. Am I the author of the Great American Novel? Yes, of course I am, I’ll start writing it whenever I get round to it. You can pay me my speaking fee now.
There is no “ontological being”, it is an illusion we create in our minds.
The emptiness of emptiness is the fact that not even emptiness exists ultimately, that it is also dependent, conventional, nominal, and in the end it is just the everydayness of the everyday. Penetrating to the depths of being, we find ourselves back on the surface of things and so discover that there is nothing, after all, beneath those deceptive surfaces. Moreover, what is deceptive about them is simply the fact that we assume ontological depth lurking just beneath.
– Jay Garfield, “Empty words, Buddhist philosophy and cross-cultural interpretation.” OUP 2002.
This is one of those cases where our internal models of reality do not correspond to reality. We use ontological being in our models, like “dog”. In reality there is no “dog”, but just a number of different entities which we place in a classification which we have constructed internally for our own convenience. There is no “dog” out there; it is purely a construct of our mind.
rossum