L
Linusthe2nd
Guest
Re: How does God create “the act of existing” out of nothing?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Linusthe2nd
Linux’s answer.
You are either saying that existence is a property of substance or you are not. If it is not a property, then substances are contingent upon esse inorder to exist and are therefore not identical.
Lets take a look here at what is meant by substance.
iep.utm.edu/aq-meta/#H4
…
( the reader can refer to the article on substance and accidents, to which I agree, I also agree to the definition of accidents, )
Linus2nd Responds
I agree to all that
Linux Interprets
Nothing said here lends authority to your claim that ESSE is created alongside an essence to make a substance.
Did I say it did?
But you are omitting some of my post. I said that I had previously provided you with evidence from Thomas Aquinas that esse was created along with the substance. And that is the point at issue. I had provided you with proof from the S.T previously but you apparantly didn’t read it. Here it is in part:
As Thomas says in S.T. 1, 45, 4 " God is the cause of created substances, which includes existence. And to be created, means also to be absolutely other than God, even in their " act of existence. "
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 ). "
Now if the proper effect of God’s creative action is existence, then God is creating an act of existence - which is what both of these quotations say. That is the point I am driving at. Now you can reject that. But I would think you would do so on some other authority and I would like to know what that authority that is. You certainly haven’t proven it by any argument of your own.
" Existence " must be interpreted in context as noun, verb, or participle.
Linus2nd
Linus 2nd
Quote:
Originally Posted by Linusthe2nd
Linux’s answer.
You are either saying that existence is a property of substance or you are not. If it is not a property, then substances are contingent upon esse inorder to exist and are therefore not identical.
This is not about greatness. This is about logical truth. If that makes me “better” it is not because i desire greatness.
Linus2nd’s responseExistence is a principle of the substance along with the essence. Thomas makes it clear that it is the Substance which is created along with its principles. The principles are more properly regarded as concreated. But it is the Substance itself, properly considered, that is created and it is the esse which is created first, in the sense of being the most important to the existence of the entire substance. Since all these are the effects of the creative act, the only possible conclusion is that the esse of each substance is a created esse. I have provided you with the proper references but you have never commented upon them.
Linux Answers.Lets take a look here at what is meant by substance.
iep.utm.edu/aq-meta/#H4
( Readers should refer to the article)
Linus2nd RespondsAgreed, a substance is that which exists in no other.
Linux Interprets the definition aboveIt is clear here that a substance is an essence that is actual/its primary identity as it is actual, and that substances are entirely distinct from esse and therefore refers primarily to the “whatness” of a thing as it exists. It is not a third emergent nature that springs forth from the conjoining of esse and essence, but rather the word simply describes the fundamental identity of an essence that is actual.
Linus2nd RespondsAgreed, but Thomas explains that the esse cannot be separated from the substance because it is that which is primary in the order of creation, it is the principle of whatever can be said to exist in the substance.
Linux continues…
( the reader can refer to the article on substance and accidents, to which I agree, I also agree to the definition of accidents, )
Linus2nd Responds
I agree to all that
Linux Interprets
Nothing said here lends authority to your claim that ESSE is created alongside an essence to make a substance.
It merely claims that the conjoining of esse and essence allows potential essences to be a real substances which is just an essence that is actual.
Linus2nd RespondsDid I say it did?
But you are omitting some of my post. I said that I had previously provided you with evidence from Thomas Aquinas that esse was created along with the substance. And that is the point at issue. I had provided you with proof from the S.T previously but you apparantly didn’t read it. Here it is in part:
As Thomas says in S.T. 1, 45, 4 " God is the cause of created substances, which includes existence. And to be created, means also to be absolutely other than God, even in their " act of existence. "
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 ). "
Now if the proper effect of God’s creative action is existence, then God is creating an act of existence - which is what both of these quotations say. That is the point I am driving at. Now you can reject that. But I would think you would do so on some other authority and I would like to know what that authority that is. You certainly haven’t proven it by any argument of your own.
" Existence " must be interpreted in context as noun, verb, or participle.
Linus2nd
Linus 2nd