B
belorg
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I suggest you learn how to read.
Yes, well, if you’d ever like to support one of your random assertions, I’ll be here.
I suggest you learn how to read.
Yes, well, if you’d ever like to support one of your random assertions, I’ll be here.
From the 1st Vatican Council, De Fide: " All that exists outside God was, in its whole substance, produced out of nothing by God. "Absolutely wrong? Not Catholic theology?
Prove it.
Source, chapter, verse, please.
Agreed. LinusAll change is the actualization of potentiality. To explain the existence of change, you must begin with a being that is not the actualization of potentiality, but is instead that which actualizes potentiality. This being cannot be an object that is changing since the ultimate cause is not itself the actualization of potentiality.
If you remove the unmoved mover, then change cannot occur because there is nothing to actualize that which is merely potential. You would literally be getting change and being out of absolutely nothing. You cannot get change or being out of absolutely nothing, therefore there has to be an unmoved mover that gives being to potential objects or actualizes potentiality.
How an unmoved mover gives actuality to potential is irrelevant in so far as determining the necessity of such a being. Even if there is an apparent contradiction, Actual Existence logically and absolutely precedes potentiality or change. You cannot have potentiality or possibility without existence. Therefore we know that an unmoved mover exists.
You cannot prove it, it is a fact known with certainty from Divine Revelation only. LinusGod cannot do the logically impossible. And asserting that he can do what is generally understood to be impossible just becuase he is God does not help the discussion or belorgs understanding. Out of nothing comes nothing, so why should anyone think that God can create without using materials or a part of himself?
And why can’t you understand that it can’t be explained? LinusExplain why?
Aquinas is talking about the logical order in which one speaks of God creating something from nothing. He is not talking about whehther it is logically possible for God to create something from nothing. He explains that nothing is not the material cuase of something. None of this is answering the question of how it is logically possible for God to create something where there was nothing without any materials. That has not been adressed, only avoided with straw-men as i said before.
I don’t see why you guys are finding this question hard to understand. It is very simple.
Out of nothing. Vatican 1, De Fide. " All that exists outside God was, in its whole substance, produced out of nothing by God. "So where did the universe come from if it wasn’t made out of God?
You are just playing a game of semantics. Dogma is not metaphysics. In the context of metaphysics, by substance, they could only be talking about what a thing is essentially; its nature. The distinction between esse and essence is not considered in the context of dogma. You are making a contextual fallacy.From the 1st Vatican Council, De Fide: " All that exists outside God was, in its whole substance, produced out of nothing by God. "
Its " substance " would include its " act of existence. "
Easy. There is an absolute distinction between esse and essence in created things.You and Linux said creatures shared in God’s existence. How do you square that with this Dogma?
No, because the context in which it is stated does not take into account metaphysical distinctions. There is no reason to mention such a distinction in a dogmatic theological statement. It is not metaphysics.If the Church meant to exclude l a being’s " act of existence, " don’t you think that would have been covered in the definition?
Id rather be wrong with Thomas than believe blindly.Again I repeat, you have either missread Thomas or he was simply wrong. He was not infallible, only the Church is infallible. Linus
You are wrong all the way through. Even Thomas accepted creation ex nihil out of Faith. Indeed, faithful and practicing Catholics must accept this Dogma in heart and mind. And indeed your attempt at a metaphysical explanation is nothing but an exalted form of Pantheism… Your big mistake is to think science and/or philosophy can explain everything. No one can explain the Mysteries of Faith.You are just playing a game of semantics. Dogma is not metaphysics. In the context of metaphysics, by substance, they could only be talking about what a thing is essentially; its nature. The distinction between esse and essence is not considered in the context of dogma. You are making a contextual fallacy.
Easy. There is an absolute distinction between esse and essence in created things.
No, because the context in which it is stated does not take into account metaphysical distinctions. There is no reason to mention such a distinction in a dogmatic theological statement. It is not metaphysics.
Id rather be wrong with Thomas than believe blindly.
You said it in your post #427. " The only way that creation can exist is for it to participate in Gods esse, for there is no esse other than God; there is only one God. Through God and in God we have our being. That is in no way saying that God is the essence of creatures. Therefore it is not pantheism; rather it is Existential- "That’s wrong. Again nobody has said that Creatures are made out of parts of God; thats a continuous strawman you keep making… Pantheism is the belief that both essences and esse is God. Its wrong precisely because it makes no distinction between the esse which is God and the potential essences which become actual by being conjoined with esse.
Thank you but it is hopeless. Some people are just determined not to accept it - for reasons unknown. LinusI agree with creatio ex nihilo as declared by Lateran IV, but I’m not sure people are really understanding what that means. It doesn’t mean that God creates the universe out of nothing as if “nothing” is some kind of preexisting substance. Nothing is the lack of any substance or being of any kind. So it would be more accurate to say that God ultimately caused material being to exist where none existed.
The preposition ex, “out of”, in the above definition does not, of course, imply that nihil, “nothing”, is to be conceived as the material out of which a thing is made — materia ex quâ — a misconception which has given rise to the puerile objection against the possibility of creation conveyed by the phrase, ex nihilo nihil fit — “nothing comes of nothing”. The ex means (a) the negation of prejacent material, out of which the product might otherwise be conceived to proceed, and (b) the order of succession, viz., existence after non-existence.
newadvent.org/cathen/04470a.htm
I think the above is a fairly good explanation.
In other-words you have no argument and instead you prefer to make assertions about how wrong my argument is in the hope that readers will blindly agree with you. Pantheism makes no distinction between esse and essence, thus we are not talking about pantheism. Philosophy isn’t for you Linus. I think you should be a commentator on dogma instead.You are wrong all the way through. Even Thomas accepted creation ex nihil out of Faith. Indeed, faithful and practicing Catholics must accept this Dogma in heart and mind. And indeed your attempt at a metaphysical explanation is nothing but an exalted form of Pantheism… Your big mistake is to think science and/or philosophy can explain everything. No one can explain the Mysteries of Faith.
Thomas would not agree with your solution.
Faith is not blind. It only appears so to the hardened of heart or the prejudiced. Linus
There are more kinds of Pantheism than a dog has flees.In other-words you have no argument and instead you prefer to make assertions about how wrong my argument is in the hope that readers will blindly agree with you. Pantheism makes no distinction between esse and essence, thus we are not talking about pantheism. Philosophy isn’t for you Linus. I think you should be a commentator on dogma instead.
Existence is absolutely other than the essence of created things. It is the essence of created things that differentiates between God and creation. Esse has nothing to do with it. Esse is that which actualises potential essences, and thus esse has to exist absolutely as actually distinct before we can rationally speak of actualising potential. God is the esse of created things, but he is not the essence of created things, and therefore it is not pantheism. Nothing you say is going to change that fact.So, since Existence is God’s very Being, it is absolutely other than the esse of created beings
Linus
… and yet don’t forget the Trinity.Existence is absolutely other than the essence of created things. It is the essence of created things that differentiates between God and creation. Esse has nothing to do with it. Esse is that which actualises potential essences, and thus esse has to exist absolutely as actually distinct before we can rationally speak of actualising potential. God is the esse of created things, but he is not the essence of created things, and therefore it is not pantheism. Nothing you say is going to change that fact.
Not “His” esse. God gives being (esse) to creatures who previously did not have it. He doesn’t give them “His” being, He gives them their own. You could say existence is the first Gift He bestows on any creature, without which the creature would not exist to receive more Gifts.Nobody said that God shares parts. God shares his esse with creatures; .
You are absolutely hopeless. My advise is that you drop any pretentions at philosophizing. This is not an ad hominem, it is the nature of the case. Though you will put the worst light on it.Existence is absolutely other than the essence of created things. It is the essence of created things that differentiates between God and creation. Esse has nothing to do with it. Esse is that which actualises potential essences, and thus esse has to exist absolutely as actually distinct before we can rationally speak of actualising potential. God is the esse of created things, but he is not the essence of created things, and therefore it is not pantheism. Nothing you say is going to change that fact.
Not “border.” Union, in the Person of Jesus. The hypostatic union is in the Person who is both Divine and human, the Word, who is the same Person as Jesus of Nazareth.… and yet don’t forget the Trinity.
How would you define the Jesus’s human body, soul?
Is there a border between Human and Divine natures?
Can God have a border?
What do you mean by saying that, “in mathematics, there are actual infinities?” Mathematics is abstract, and abstract is the opposite of actual. In mathematics, we actually deal with infinities, I’ll grant you that. But those infinities are as abstract as any of the values we assign to numbers. That is why, in mathematics, we can deal equally well with rational or irrational, positive or negative, real or imaginary. There is no real square root of negative one, but mathematically, i makes just as much sense as -1 or 1. That is because in mathematics, everything is abstract. So in mathematics, there are infinities, and, mathematics is useful in describing the world, even though in the world there are no actual infinities.Love4All:![]()
In mathematics, that is true, just like in mathematics, there are actual infinities.The question is: are mathematical sets real? If they aren’t, your reply to me is meaningless, and if they are, that would completely contradict Catholic doctrine of creation from nothing, since even an empty set would not be nothing.wG = {G}. G {- {G}.
The world wG is the set {G}. The set {G} is not the same thing as its element, G. Rather, G is an element of {G}. Therefore,
{G} =/= G.
The possible world with God alone in it is not the same thing as God in Himself.
{} = 0.
{0} = 1. ( {{}} = 1. )
{0, 1} = 2, etc. ( { {}, {{}} } = 2. )
Every set contains the null set as an element. Thus the set, wG = {God}, which is the same thing as to say, { {}, God}. God is One. (Theologically accurate!) Thus, God = {0}, whereas the set containing God AND nothing else, would have to be {0, {0}}, or 2.
Thus, G = 1 and wG = 2; they are not equal.
2 does not have identical properties to 1.
Translation: Linusthe2nd cannot refute my argument with real philosophy, and so he is now telling me to read a book that he doesn’t understand himself; a book that even refutes his own position.You are absolutely hopeless. My advise is that you drop any pretentions at philosophizing. This is not an ad hominem, it is the nature of the case. Though you will put the worst light on it.
You said you read " Aquinas " by Edward Feser. You need to read him again. Then actually read the Summas, perhaps something will sink in. Linus