“X comes from Y” = “Y caused X”, I think that’s a fine gloss.
Eleve, it would probably be better not to use " from" to explain the fact of creation. The minds you are dealing with either cannot understand the nuances of the English language or they are playing Sadducee, Pharisee with you. God caused ’ x " should do the trick.’
See if this helps in some of the current discussion.
Quote:
Originally Posted by belorg
My argument is that if God is the cerator of everything, it follows that there is a possible world in which God is alone.
In such a world there is act but no potency. Hence, since God is immutable, there can never be potency. Hence God cannot create potency. Hence potency cannot have been crated by God. Hence, either potency is eternal and uncreated, which contradicts Cattholic doctrine, or potency can be crated, which contradicts the fact that God is pure act. ( End of Belorg’s quote )
My answer. ( Linus )
Not in the least. Potency is not a being, substance, or thing. If you knew anything about Thomism, you would know that. You can read it any time, nothing is stoping you. In the philosophy of St. Thomas " potency " is a " principle " or cause of being along with " act, " the second " principle of being. This applies to all created being. Angels are composed of essence ( the principle of potency for angels ) and existence ( the principle of act for angles.
In created things the potency principle is matter, the principle of act is form, through which material being gets its existence. In matter there any number of forms in potency which may be educed by a number of causes. For example, water contains in potency the forms of H2 and O. By a process of electroysis ( cause ) the potential forms of H2 and O can be educed from water, made actual.
As you see potency is a principle, not a thing, it is not being.
Now it is true that when the universe had not been created there existed only God. According to Catholic teaching God, Who is a living, intelligent being, having infinite wisdom and goodness and knowledge ( among other things ) knows all possible things that could be. These are facts of his knowledge, not principles of potency.
You are correct in saying God cannot create potency because as I showed above " potency " is not a thing but a principle. So to say God cannot create potency is to state the obvious. Hence there is no dilemma. Potency is neither " eternal and uncreated " nor " created. " Thus, there is no contradiction in Catholic Doctrine. You have errected a " red herring, " a " straw man. " ( End of my answer )
Eleve, you might also read S.T. Ques 44-47 on creation. I doubt if these birds can understand it, but you can give it a try.
Linus