Verbum Caro & Rosco
Re: Help in Understanding Transubstantiation, Accidents and Substance.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Roscoe Turner
I keep hearing it’s the underlying reality that changes but no one can point to what that is other than our idea of something.
I don’t think substance is an actual thing. Just a concept. So if it’s just a concept, it is just how we think about the Host and Wine that changes. No one can point to substance in anyway but as a concept, and ideal. It just an idea. There is no “thing” that can be changed, just how we think about it.
RT,
Perhaps Linusthe2nd is coming at this from a top-down approach (see his list of First Substances), and I am coming at this from a bottom-up approach (which, I think, integrates into a top-down, or rather, observational approach).
The bottom-up approach is this: when you get to the primary particle, what is it that makes it real? What thing can you point to that gives it it’s reality? From whence does it’s being come? I assume one might point to atoms to explain the reality of a tree, and to subatomic particles to explain the reality of the atom. But, what about that first (or final) particle? What could one point to?
VC
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As Thomas says in S.T. 1, 45, 4 " I answer that, To be created is, in a manner, to be made, as was shown above (44, 2, ad 2,3). Now, to be made is directed to the being of a thing. Hence to be made and to be created properly belong to whatever being belongs; which, indeed, belongs properly to subsisting things, whether they are simple things, as in the case of separate substances, or composite, as in the case of material substances. For being belongs to that which has being–that is, to what subsists in its own being. But forms and accidents and the like are called beings, not as if they themselves were, but because something is by them; as whiteness is called a being, inasmuch as its subject is white by it. Hence, according to the Philosopher (Metaph. vii, text 2) accident is more properly said to be “of a being” than “a being.” Therefore, as accidents and forms and the like non-subsisting things are to be said to co-exist rather than to exist, so they ought to be called rather “concreated” than “created” things; whereas, properly speaking, created things are subsisting beings.
Reply to Objection 1. In the proposition “the first of created things is being,” the word “being” does not refer to the subject of creation, but to the proper concept of the object of creation. For a created thing is called created because it is a being, not because it is “this” being, since creation is the emanation of all being from the Universal Being, as was said above (Article 1). We use a similar way of speaking when we say that “the first visible thing is color,” although, strictly speaking, the thing colored is what is seen.
Reply to Objection 2. Creation does not mean the building up of a composite thing from pre-existing principles; but it means that the “composite” is created so that it is brought into being at the same time with all its principles.
Reply to Objection 3. This reason does not prove that matter alone is created, but that matter does not exist except by creation; for creation is the production of the whole being, and not only matter "
Again, in 45, 5 he states, " Among all effects the most universal is existence itself…"
and further on he says, " Now God’s proper effect is that which is presupposed to any other, namely existence tout court ( simply ). "
Therefore, whatever is a part of a being ( i.e. atoms, electrons, etc. ) is so by the " act of existence, " which is created along with the being as the principle which makes the being exist. In short, in each being, all that it is, is a product of creation, including existence itself, which, properly speaking, is prior to everything else in a being.
Linus2nd