S
Sarpedon
Guest
I’m not an expert on this by any means- I’m an undergraduate student of philosophy. Nevertheless, I’ll cite relevant explanations from Gilson and the citations he provides to St. Thomas.
Do you have some info (e.g., a Thomas cite) about the relationship between actus essendi and ens? Is the actus essendi of a creature the same as God’s esse? Do creatures “participate” in God’s esse?
To understand this doctrine in its proper nature, it is necessary to remember that esse, like every verb, designates an act* and not a state. The state in which the esse places that which receives it is the state of ens, that is to say, of that which is a “being.” Because essenses are the proper object of human understanding, we tend ceaselessly to step down from the plane of the act-of-being to that of things (res). This is a natural inclination, but the metaphysician must make every effort to remount, that is to emphasize that being has meaning only in relation to actual existence**. Beyond that is most perfect and most profound in the real, there is nothing. Now, what is the most perfect is the act-of-being (ipsum esse) “since it is related to all things as their act. In fact, nothing has any actuality save in that it exists. The act-of-being (ipsume esse) is the actuality of everything else, even including forms. Its relation to other things therefore is not that of receiver to received but of received to receiver. Indeed, when I say of a man, or of a horse, or of anything else: that exists, the act-of-being (ipsum esse) is taken as formal and recieved, and not as that to which the act-of-being belongs.”*** St. Thomas is here noticeably making, as it were, a supreme effort, so much so that the meaning fairly rings through the formulae, to express the unique character of ipsum esse and its transcendence. But precisely because it is the summit of the real, it is also its heart. “The act-of-existing is more intimate to anything whatsoever that is what determines it.”**** (pg 34)
- Contra Gentiles I, 22.
** Summa, I, 5, I, to 1.
*** Summa, I, 4, I, to 3
**** In II Sent., I, I, 4.