It means, that even if they still look, taste, feel, and smell link bread and wine, they are not. It is as simple, and as mysterious, as that.
Essence and accidents are used in the Aristotelian sense. Have you explored these?
yes. i picked up on that, but i’m trying to figure out how it could apply to transubstatiation. it doesn’t seem to work.
Wiki says:
“In philosophy, essence is the attribute or set of attributes that make an object or substance what it fundamentally is, and which it has by necessity, and without which it loses its identity. Essence is contrasted with accident: a property that the object or substance has contingently, without which the substance can still retain its identity. The concept originates with Aristotle, who used the Greek expression to ti ên einai, literally ‘the what it was to be’, or sometimes the shorter phrase to ti esti, literally ‘the what it is,’ for the same idea.”
in the Aristotelian notion of essences and accidents there is a certain attribute or set of attributes that make bread what it fundamentally is, and there is likewise a certain attribute or set of attributes that make jesus what he is. without these attributes both bread and jesus would lose their identity. agreed?
so the transubstantiation theory goes that in the mass the bread loses its fundamental bread-ness, and this breadness is replaced with jesus-ness. right?
but what is bread-ness, and what is jesus-ness? we are okay to leave jesus-ness un-described since since it thought to be a supernatural attribute, but we all know bread-ness already, right? we know bread not by its accidents but by its essence just as the coffee cup that was mentioned by the other poster (who seems to have vanished). if the bread-ness is not present, we know we don’t have bread.
the problem for me (and i would think for aristotle as well) is that the bread is still bread. even if you think it has the added essential property of jesus-ness, it still has all the bread-ness it ever had. it still has that fundamental attribute that sustains it as bread. if it didn’t, we would know it since we know what bread-ness is.
the problem is that anyone encountering this post-communion ritual bread would apprehend the bread-ness of the bread both before and after this change supposedly occurred. so the bread-ness is still there. transubstantiation hasn’t occurred.
you say the whole thing is a mystery. maybe the jesus-ness part is, but we all know bread-ness. it is no mystery. we would know if the bread-ness was missing from what was previously said to be bread.
rocinante