V
Verbum_Caro
Guest
Thomas,Disagreeing with I-I, 2 (which is not applicable to this question and I understand not allowed on the forum) I have a hard time taking much from the rest of the section–for me it is on par with trying to identify the china pattern on Russell’s teapot.
If you mean that disagreeing with the response to I, q. 2, a. 3 makes the rest of of Part I inaccessible or unintelligible then I’m not sure exactly why that would be so necessarily (although I don’t call into question your own experiences). It seems to me that one could take the this article as an *"*assuming arguendo" and go on from there. That seems to be how you framed your question at the outset, since you talk about God. (As an aside, I think you could also take I, q. 2, a. 3 in a limited way. One commentator makes the point that that St. Thomas is here only saying that the question “Why does everything exist?” is a legitimate question, and the kind of question that has an answer, and that we can reason out the answer. The answer happens to be “that which we call God”, but “God” is somewhat of placeholder for whatever it is that answers that question.)
As for the analogy of the China pattern on Russel’s teapot, perhaps it is more akin to thinking about teapots in general, their shape, the various patterns possible, their topology, the orbit, etc. Those things make sense to talk about even if you haven’t been able to see the teapot itself.
Thomas, I can see why what you say here could be the case if divine goodness described a thing that was extrinsic to God, like an accident that inhered in Him. What I am suggesting is a third way, which might be a solution to the dilemma.If there can be said to be such a thing as divine goodness then it seems the first of our two options applies (good is ontologically prior to God) or perhaps I’m having linguistic issues.
I’m thinking something along the lines of this from the old Catholic Encyclopedia:
VCwhile truth, goodness, wisdom, holiness and other attributes, as we conceive and define them express perfections that are formally distinct, yet as applied to God they are all ultimately identical in meaning and describe the same ultimate reality — the one infinitely perfect and simple being.