In a sense, of course the creature’s act of being is created,
Its essence is created; reality is not.
so it is not radically ‘independent.’
It is radically independent if its intrinsic nature is the act of existing.
But at the same time it is created,
Its essence is created, existence is not.
so it is the creature’s own act of being,
If the essence of a creature has its own intrinsic act of reality, if reality is intrinsic to its essence, then God did not create it, and neither did it have a beginning.
which is not that of God. (I’m certainly open to your thoughts, but I’m quite confident that that is the Catholic position.)
The idea that created essences have their own act of reality as such that it is an intrinsic expression of their independent nature as opposed to Gods, is contrary to Catholic teaching. The potential essences of things are radically and entirely dependent on God for their existence.
St. Thomas teaches that esse is the intrinsic final perfection of the essence. It belongs to the essence qua actually created thing.
I dare say that you are taking this, or at least reading it, out of context. In any case I don’t care what Aquinas thinks; i am only concerned with logical consistence. If he really said this in the context that you are now presenting it, then his thinking is flawed. If the nature of existence is intrinsic to the essence of something, then such a being would perfectly exist with no beginning or end because its intrinsic nature is existence. Only God has this nature; it is not a potential essence like you and I.
It of course remains dependent on God
Its nature is to exist, thus it is radically independent of your God.
, but that does not imply that its esse is identical God’s esse.
The essence of a human being is not identical to Gods essence or esse. The actuality of a potential essence is entirely and radically dependent on the existential act of Gods reality.
This is in fact impossible,
Your idea of existence is impossible.
it seems, since that would imply that its esse is also identical to whatever God’s esse is identical to (since identity is a transitive relation), so the creature’s esse would also be identical to God’s essence, and in that case how could we maintain that the creature is not simply identical to God?
Because in the first place, nobody said that a potential essence has an esse. Secondly, God conferring his own reality on to a potential essence does not change the fact that God is not that essence, but rather is the existential act through which that essence is real and sustained. God remains his own esse and essence, and at no point does a potential essence become Gods esse.
For Aquinas, again, existence is the final perfection of an essence or nature; it is not itself a nature.
In order to receive reality, reality must first exist. But since you say that reality does not have its own nature, then it follows that there is no such thing as existence because it has no nature or reality. Therefore existence is objectively meaningless; and thus there is no substantial objective difference between the act of something and non-existence. This is obviously impossible.
- Out of nothing comes nothing
- Absolutely nothing cannot exist.
- Therefore there is a being who has a nature that intrinsically the act of existence.
- It follows thus that “Existence” is a nature, and the nature of existence is to be real as opposed to nothing.
Aquinas’s philosophy, as you present it, is meaningless and flawed. And i am happy reject it as outdated and heretical in nature in so far as how it treats existence.
Okay, so presumably you’ll disagree, but it seems perfectly clear to me that that is not an orthodox Catholic view of the matter.
It seems evidently clear to me that my philosophy conforms perfectly to how God’s nature is presented by the Catholic faith.
Can you explain where your view comes from?
For me, it was a mixture of reading and doing my own thinking. Its mostly inspired by Aquinas’s distinction between esse and essence. It is also born out of a need to make logical sense of creation ex-nihilo.