G
Gloria1
Guest
[W]hat is the difference between essence and existence.
[Edited by Moderator]
[Edited by Moderator]
MSC:[Edited by Moderator] I’ll give you one.
- Essence is what is inherent to that thing. Existence is inherent to God it is in God’s nature to Exist. God says, “I AM”.
- Existence is a property of some thing.
Jim:Existence is being. Anything which exists has the quality of being.
Essence is the answer to the question “what” is it that exists? It is the nature of a thing.
Only in God is essence equal to existence.
Essence is the nature of a thing. My nature is “human.” A dog’s nature is canine. Spock’s nature is “Vulcan.” I have existence as a human being. But God’s essence is “to be.” His nature is existence itself, which is why He holds existence as necessary and not as contingent.Jim:
Please explain what you mean by saying, “Only in God is essence equal to existence.”
Hence His name: “I Am that Am”.Essence is the nature of a thing. My nature is “human.” A dog’s nature is canine. Spock’s nature is “Vulcan.” I have existence as a human being. But God’s essence is “to be.” His nature is existence itself, which is why He holds existence as necessary and not as contingent.
Thank you Ghost and Jim!Quote:Originally Posted by JimG forums.catholic-questions.org/images/buttons_cad/viewpost.gif Essence is the nature of a thing. My nature is “human.” A dog’s nature is canine. Spock’s nature is “Vulcan.” I have existence as a human being. But God’s essence is “to be.” His nature is existence itself, which is why He holds existence as necessary and not as contingent.
Hence His name: “I Am that Am”.
Obviously there is “more” to God than just existing, but only in the sense that pure, infinite existence is more than we can even begin to comprehend. Pure, infinite, eternal existence is still the very Essence of God, it just means more than we can speak with the word “existence”, and includes all “Divine Attributes” in a single unity.
Peace and God bless!
Yes, God is existence. Not only is his essence equal to existence, but each of his attributes is identical to his essence. In other words God’s omnipotence = God’s Mercy = God’s Omnipresence, etc. His attributes are not something that he possesses as addendums to his existence but as his very essence.That is, the logical conclusion that follows from what you are both saying is that God is existence. Is this correct?
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What you are saying sounds wise, yet when i try to think it through, i run into a difficulty. Please allow me to explain:Yes, God is existence. Not only is his essence equal to existence, but each of his attributes is identical to his essence. In other words God’s omnipotence = God’s Mercy = God’s Omnipresence, etc. His attributes are not something that he possesses as addendums to his existence but as his very essence.
Humans and other creatures on the other hand, possess existence only contingently, and not as identical to our essence.
We tend to view “existence” as something passive, but Aquinas, I believe, also states that as between Act and Potency, God is all Act and no potency, thus he exists at an infinite and perfect level.
If the verb “to be” were a regular verb, we could say that God "be"s more than you and I, even an infinite extent more.
No, you kind of existence is fundamentally different from God’s, but analogically similar. He exists eternally, infinitely, and singularily; you exist contingently and compositely. The same word, existence, is used not because we have precisely the same thing as God in this case, but because contingent existence is an “aping” of true Divine Existence. It’s similar to how we could call both a basketball, and a picture of a basketball, “basketballs”.What you are saying sounds wise, yet when i try to think it through, i run into a difficulty. Please allow me to explain:
I am a human being who, because i have conscious thought, know i exist. Whether i’m awake or dreaming, sane or out of my mind, i cannot tell. That my mind has existence as one of its attributes is certain, for, as Descartes wrote, “I think, therefore I am.”
Now, you say something that i have never considered before. For, i believe that the evidence is sound that God has existence as one of His attributes, but you are saying something else. Rather than saying God exists, you claim that He IS existence.
Putting these two premises together, the logical conclusion astonishes me: God is one of my attributes. The line of reasoning, in imperfect form, is this:
A = XX = GthereforeG = IwhereA is an attribute that i haveandX is existenceandG is GodAre you saying that on of my attributes is God? or do you think it is more accurate to say that God has and gives existence, rather than saying God is existence? or am i guilty of the sin i often commit of misunderstanding?
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The answer is what is known as “participation”. That which exists partakes of or participates in existence, while not being identical with it. Existence is one of its attributes. However, the essence of existence (God) is a subsistent form, that is, one that is real independently of anything partaking of it. Whiteness, for example, is not a subsistent form–whiteness is real only insofar as any given thing is white.What you are saying sounds wise, yet when i try to think it through, i run into a difficulty. Please allow me to explain:
I am a human being who, because i have conscious thought, know i exist. Whether i’m awake or dreaming, sane or out of my mind, i cannot tell. That my mind has existence as one of its attributes is certain, for, as Descartes wrote, “I think, therefore I am.”
Now, you say something that i have never considered before. For, i believe that the evidence is sound that God has existence as one of His attributes, but you are saying something else. Rather than saying God exists, you claim that He IS existence.
Putting these two premises together, the logical conclusion astonishes me: God is one of my attributes.
Your existence is not an attribute, rather it is that in which attributes inhere. However, with God, each of his attributes is really identical with his existence, which is held as a necessity, not as a contingency.
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It seems the two of you disagree. Jim, you say existence is not an attribute. Hast, you say existence is an attribute. However, perhaps your disagreement is merely an apparent one (i.e., the disagreement might not actually exist)?The answer is what is known as “participation”. That which exists partakes of or participates in existence, while not being identical with it. Existence is one of its attributes. …
Yes, Ghosty, i see what you mean. Yet, i’m reminded of these words of Christ:No, you kind of existence is fundamentally different from God’s, but analogically similar. He exists eternally, infinitely, and singularily; you exist contingently and compositely. The same word, existence, is used not because we have precisely the same thing as God in this case, but because contingent existence is an “aping” of true Divine Existence. It’s similar to how we could call both a basketball, and a picture of a basketball, “basketballs”.
Peace and God bless!
I think it’s only an apparent disagreement. I agree with what Hastrman wrote. To the extent that we possess existence only contingently, it could be viewed as an attribute of humanity, (as opposed to the essence of humanity.) God possesses existence as his very essence. The one thing impossible to God is non-existence. Non-existence would be “nothing” and nothing IS impossible to God.It seems the two of you disagree. Jim, you say existence is not an attribute. Hast, you say existence is an attribute. However, perhaps your disagreement is merely an apparent one (i.e., the disagreement might not actually exist)?
Will each of you explain on what you appear agree or on what you seem to disagree?
That would be the participation in the Life of Grace, which is the very life of God, but not in the same what God has it.If you agree that these words ring true, do you also assent that God can give to you or i the same infinite existence (i.e., the same eternal life) that He has?