continuation from above . . .
Now as to our second falsification, that the thing acted upon reacts upon the agent, it can be proposed that precisely as acted upon rather than as acting, the agent," e.g., the saw (that is dulled), is not truly an agent but a “receiver." The two falsifications, then, do not destroy the truth of the conclusion: that motion is the act not of the mover but of the mobile, i.e., the thing capable of being moved.
The truth of this follows immediately from the truth of the premises in our demonstration. Since the minor has already been established in connection with the first definition of motion, it remains now only to establish the truth of the major proposition, i.e., the act of the potential as potential is the act of the mobile as mobile. The proof of the major is that such an act, i.e., the act of the potential as potential, cannot be the act of the mover for the reason that the causing of motion must be the act of something actual, not the act of something potential. The potential,
per se, cannot operate; a potential storm can never cause any damage or even do any good. It simply cannot operate as a cause. Only what is actual can cause. As actual, then, the agent does not undergo the act of the potential as potential although as moved by some other cause, as a receiver rather than an agent, the “agent" may be potential. The only other possible subject of motion is the mobile. As the act of what exists in potency, motion takes place only in the mobile; motion is in mobile being and what goes on in the producer of the motion cannot properly be said to be motion.
Now, the forgoing is clear, since in our language we actually have two words that describe the states of motion by an agent. The first we call “action,” while the second we call “passion.” What do these two states mean as far as our definitions are concerned? Well, an analysis of experience will show that it is the same motion which in different ways characterizes both the agent and the receiver. Take, for example, the impressing of a seal upon wax. The seal is impressing something into the wax to the same extent that the wax is receiving the impression. Thus, there is only one motion here, rather than two. It is
by the seal, but
in or
on the wax. Likewise, from our previous example, it is
by the saw, but
on the wood. And, it is
by the storm, but
on the earth surface affected. Thus, it is
by the ‘agent’, the storm, but,
in or
on the affected earth surface, the “patient,” or material cause. Latin has two excellent phrases that adequately define
action and
passion:
terminus a quo, or that principle from which the motion originates, i.e., the agent which produces the ‘action’, and,
terminus ex quo, or that principle out of which motion comes, or the patient which
receives.
For a moment, let us consider efficient causality. There is the notion of emergence or evolution whenever something new comes to be in this world. And that is so despite that its structural explanation is that it is merely a rearrangement of existing matter, which we are happy to postulate. One thing comes
out of something else rather than is
put into something else. From this we understand that motion really comes out of the patient as nothing goes into the patient. Nothing goes out of the agent and into the patient. Therefore, motion is really
out of’ the patient and
by the agent. Thus, the agent, i.e., efficient cause, remains extrinsic to the motion of the moved, but, is nevertheless the cause of the motion while simultaneously itself being characterized by motion in some way.
More later as I must leave for work! But, I’m not finished yet.
God bless,
jd