Little Summary of Metaphysics PDF
Little Summary of Metaphysics PDF
Little Summary of Metaphysics PDF
by
ALLAN B. WOLTER OFM,
BRUCE PUBLISHING COMPANY, MILWAUKEE, 1958.
Allan Wolter is best known for his work on the text and translation of Blessed John
Duns Scotus. But he was an accomplished thinker in his own right. This little book
was published in Latin (at a time when trained Catholics were more comfortable
reading and writing Latin – and when seminarians in Rome were still taught in
Latin). It deserves to be better known, for it is a fine introduction to key concepts,
ideas, and questions in metaphysics. The preface neatly explains Wolter’s purpose
and procedure in writing the book. Worth noting, though, is how remarkably
ecumenical it is in its use of Scholastic and non-Scholastic materials. For while it
tends to follow the Scotist position, it does not ignore, or entirely eschew, the
positions of St. Thomas Aquinas or other great Scholastics, past and present, nor
does it ignore, though it hardly endorses, later and non-Scholastic thinkers and
theories. Distinctive of it is the way it lays out and defends in direct and pleasingly
summative ways such doctrines (marginalized or opposed by others in the
Scholastic tradition) as the disjunctive attributes of being, the univocity of the
concept of being, multiple proofs based on the disjunctive attributes for the
existence of God (running at a tangent to the famous five ways of St. Thomas),
among others.
The work is historically as well as metaphysically informed and informative,
and may well serve as a suitable textbook in metaphysics courses, at least for those
who do not wish students to know only what modern philosophers, or modern
Thomists, are up to.
At all events, for diversion if not also for instruction, the following translation
(still in need of revision) is offered here to the indulgent reader.
Peter Simpson
New York
May 2017
2
PREFACE
Preface
Allan Wolter OFM, Feast of St. Peter in Chains, 1956, St. Bonaventure, NY.
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On the Description of this Science and its Relation to other Disciplines: Metaphysics
can, therefore, be described as the first real speculative science.
It is a science because it is a body of demonstrated truths about a single
formal object. The things that are chiefly demonstrated about being are its
properties or transcendental attributes, whether these are simply convertible with
being, as ‘one’, ‘true’, ‘good’, or are disjunctively convertible, as ‘act’ and ‘potency,
‘dependent’ and ‘independent’ etc. Insofar as it is a science, metaphysics differs from
sacred theology because the latter is not a science in the strict Aristotelian sense for
its principles are not evident but revealed.
Metaphysics is a real science, as is plain from its definition. For being
signifies the same as thing or what actually exists or is at least capable of such
existence. Therefore metaphysical notions are first intentions, or concepts that are
predicated immediately of things themselves. So metaphysics differs from the
logical sciences which deal with second intentions, that is, with concepts that are
predicated immediately of other concepts or of beings of reason.
Metaphysics indeed is the first or supreme real science, and so differs from
other less universal real things, as physics, cosmology, psychology; for it does not
just consider one or other part of reality, as these sciences do, but with the totality of
things. Therefore, by reason of its material object, metaphysics is equivalent to all
the real sciences taken together. Further, it is first by reason of its formal object; for
the other sciences consider real things in some narrower respect, as physics
considers things as changeable, cosmology things as bodily, etc. But metaphysics
considers them precisely as they are real. Hence other real sciences, as cosmology,
philosophy of man, presuppose metaphysics and use its conclusions as their
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principles. But metaphysics does not use the conclusions of any other real science,
physics or natural philosophy, as principles.
Metaphysics is a speculative and not practical science, because it does not
tend toward any other operation but speculation. Hence it differs from ethics, which
is practical.
Other Names of this Science: Aristotle, the author of this science, designated it with
two names (Metaphysics 6.1.1026a19, 24): theology or divine science, for by its
investigating the ultimate causes of beings it reaches the contemplation of God and
angels; first philosophy, for it considers the first causes of things and because other
real sciences follow metaphysics by taking their principles from it.
After Christian Wolff (1679-1754) many neo-Scholastics divide metaphysics
into general (ontology) and special (cosmology, psychology, natural theology), but
badly, because neither ontology (the science of being qua being) nor natural
theology (natural science about God) can be construed as sciences by us in this life
independently of each other; for when we prove the disjunctive properties of being
we by that fact demonstrate the existence and nature of the first being, namely God.
Nor does it seem that we can easily prove all the simply convertible properties,
namely true and good, unless we first have knowledge of God as infinitely or
perfectly intelligent and loving. Hence metaphysics as the science of being qua being
must include as an integral part the treatment of infinite being as it is the ultimate
cause and reason of the universe of beings.
Of the Division of this Science: Having, therefore, rejected the division of Wolff, we
will try in the following pages to construct a metaphysical science where, in true
Scholastic tradition, the science of being qua being and natural theological science
are united. So the following division is proposed:
The first part treats of the notion of transcendental being and its attributes
considered in general. Included as well is the treatment of the attribute ‘one’, which
is the first among the attributes of being.
The second part treats of the disjunctively convertible attributes, namely
transient and permanent, act and potency, caused and uncaused, substantial and
accidental, absolute and relative etc. Together these attributes are shown to be in
fact the primary divisions of real beings.
The third part treats of the existence and nature of the first being, namely
God, in whom indeed is verified the perfect member of each disjunction, namely
permanent, pure act, uncaused, substance, absolute etc. Dealt with here is also the
intellectual life of God, namely his understanding and volition, and of his relation to
the finite world.
The fourth and last part treats of certain of the simply convertible attributes,
namely true and good, or of the universal intelligibility and loveliness of being.
By way of introduction we will, in the following part of the introduction, deal
with the method of metaphysics, where we will treat of: 1) the methodological
starting point, namely the experience of finite being; 2) Aristotle’s famous division
of the being we experience, namely the ten categories; 3) certain transcendental
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properties of the being of experience; the scientific method of metaphysics and its
certitude and value.
The Starting Point: Every science takes its beginning from some principle or
principles that are both evident and necessarily true (Aristotle, Analytica Posteriora
1.2). The given datum from which such principles are drawn by the metaphysician is
the fact or experience of something real. Such experience is inseparable from the
conscious life of man, for whether we think or will or feel or experience some
motion of spirit, we are always conscious that our experience is a fact or something
real. This fact of experience is expressed in this proposition: ‘Something is’.
This very evident proposition, although it is in itself a necessary one (as will
be shown later), is yet a proposition that for us is purely contingent. Hence, in order
to preserve the condition of Aristotelian science that the principles be necessary, we
can infer something necessary from the contingent proposition ‘something is’,
namely the proposition that ‘the existence of something is possible’ or that ‘there is
no repugnance between something and existence’. For as Scotus well observes
(Lectura 1), “I say that although things other than God are in fact contingent in
respect of actual being, they are not so in respect of potential being. So things that
are contingent with respect to actual existence are necessary with respect to
possible existence, as that although it is contingent that man exists yet that his
existence is possible is necessary.” Likewise from the other givens of experience we
can infer conclusions that are both evident (evident, that is, from principles about
their inherence) and necessary, and we can use these givens as principles in
constructing our metaphysical science, as for example the principles that ‘something
that is not eternal is possible’, ‘something that is contingent, transient, changeable
etc. is possible’.
The name ‘being’ (like the name ‘thing’ and ‘something’ which, unless
otherwise noted, signify the same as ‘being’) is used by use to designate everything
and anything that is not repugnant to existence, whether it exists actually here and
now or not actually but already exists in its causes.
predicaments. These ten categories are substance, quantity, quality, relation, action,
passion, when, where, position, and possession.
Note. On the name ‘category’: Etymologically the Greek word ‘category’ signifies a
public accusation or charge and derives from the verb ‘to accuse’. So it is a forensic
word that Aristotle uses in a special sense to designate logical attribution and
predication, for he sees a likeness between the mind and a judge. Therefore the act
of the predicating mind is said to be a ‘judgment’ and that which is predicated of a
subject is said to be an ‘accusation’. Now since every accusation or predication
pronounced of a subject falls under one of the ten ultimate kinds, these supreme
kinds are called ‘categories’. But insofar as the predicaments are first intentions
predicated of the nature of things, they belong, according to many neo-Scholastics,
not only to logic but also to metaphysics as the supreme kinds of limited real being.
Hence they say, let the categories be defined as the supreme kinds or ways in which
things can exist in nature, or more briefly as the kinds of real being.
What sort of reality can be put into the categories? Scholastics distinguish
between those that directly fall under the categories and those that only indirectly
or reductively do so. Nothing can be directly placed in a category save a being real,
finite, and essentially one: 1) ‘Real’ to exclude all beings of reason and Scotistic
formalities, which are not things but aspects of things. So it is vain to ask whether
animality, rationality etc. are substances or accidents, for animality is not a thing but
a perfection whereby a thing (an animal) is an animal. 2) ‘Finite’ being because, in
order for a thing to be properly reduced to some kind, it must be a metaphysical
composite, that is, composed of genus and differentia. But God is not metaphysically
composite and so is not properly reducible to a category or a supreme kind.
Although the notion of substance is predicated of God and creatures, and indeed
univocally according to Scotists and many non-Thomists, such a notion of substance
is not predicamental but transcendental (on which see below). 3) Being ‘essentially
one’, that is, a being that has a single natural essence, whether simple or composite,
because what is not essentially one can exist in several categories. Hereby are
excluded beings per accidens, for example moral unities (family, flock, army),
artificial unities (panels, table, house etc.), or unities of mere aggregates (as mixed
composites). Also excluded are the integral parts that lose their essential unity if
separated from the thing of which they are parts, as hand, head, etc. Parts as such
and constitutive metaphysical principles, as completive modes, are said to be
reductively contained in the category of the thing they belong to, and thus the
rationality and animality of man can be reduced to substance. Artificial things are
reduced partly to substance (the matter they are made of) and partly to quality
(their accidental forms). A moral unity, as a family etc., is reduced to substance (by
reason of the persons) and relation (by reason of paternity, sonship, etc.). Beings of
reason too can be reduced in some way by an analogous extrinsic reduction, e.g.
point is reduced to the category of quantity, ignorance to the category of quality
(knowledge falls under quality), etc.
Various problems have been raised about Aristotle’s categories. Is the
classification adequate or sufficiently comprehensive? For some say that motion
perhaps is a distinct kind. Others say that the categories go beyond what is
sufficient, for the last six categories can be reduced to the category of relation.
Others dispute whether relation is really distinct from the related things. And
indeed we can ask if all the predicaments are things in the strict sense, as Scotus and
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Thomas reckon them to be, or if, as Ockham says, only some are, namely substance
and quality. These questions seem to me of little moment, so let him dispute of them
who will.
The categories that a neo-Scholastic metaphysician is accustomed to treat of
specifically are substance, quality, and relation. But these notions will be sufficiently
expounded by us in the diverse treatments of the disjunctive attributes of
transcendental being.
This way of proceeding from what is simply posterior, namely from real
being as we experience it, namely as contingent, caused, transient, etc. to things that
are necessarily required as conditions sine qua non of its existence, can be called a
sort of metaphysical reduction. It is called ‘reduction’ because the mind is as it were
led back from the data of immediate experience to the conditions and hidden causes
on which they depend. ‘Metaphysical’ is added because this reduction seems to
differ from the reduction that the natural sciences use. For a reduction is found in
these too, namely to theories and hypotheses from which, as from conjectured
conditions and causes, the effects that are empirically observed can follow. This
method of the natural sciences, which is called hypothetico-deductive insofar as it
regards the verification of theories, is also called ‘inventive induction’ insofar as the
cultivators of the sciences create a certain theoretical law or explanation from their
own mental fertility. But none of their theories is so certain that no other theory or
hypothesis can be thought up, and so all such theories, although they are often not
far distant from at least a practical certainty, do not go beyond probability. In
metaphysics, on the contrary, when once it is conceded, for example, that some
finite being is not sufficient to itself for its existence but requires some explanation
outside itself, then it follows that no other theoretical explanation can be found save
in something non-finite. Likewise, a caused being can be explained only by an
uncaused being, a transient being by something permanent, a contingent being by
something necessary, and so on through the other disjunctive attributes that are
contradictorily opposed with respect to being. For although ‘caused being’ and
‘uncaused being’ are not contradictories (for there could be a third between them,
namely ‘non-being’), nevertheless ‘caused’ and ‘uncaused’ are mutually
contradictory in respect of the same subject, just as ‘white’ and ‘non-white’ are
mutually contradictory in respect of the same man. Hence to deny that all beings are
caused is the same as to assert that some being is uncaused. And in this sense there
is given by metaphysical reduction not just one theory among many possible
explanations, as is the case with the natural sciences, but rather, once the necessity
is conceded for some explanation of the existence of observed things in something
other than themselves, metaphysical reduction gives, by virtue of the law of
contradiction and excluded middle, only one possible theoretical solution. And in
this sense metaphysical conclusions exceed the probability found in the theories of
the natural sciences. So the certitude that the metaphysician can have seems to be
the highest that the human intellect can naturally achieve in any theoretical science
about real things.
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Definition of Transcendental
So, following the lead of Scotus, a transcendental can be defined negatively as
whatever cannot be contained under any kind, or positively as whatever belongs to
being as being is indifferent to infinite and finite, or as being is proper to infinite
being. The formal idea of the transcendent, then, lies not in that it is commonly
predicated of every being, but in that it is beyond every kind (Scotus, Oxon. 1 d.8 q.3
nn.18-19).
Division of Transcendentals
The transcendentals can be divided into four classes. 1) Being, which is the first
among the transcendentals. That being is a transcendental notion is plain from the
definitions adduced above, for being is common to all the categories and so can be
confined to none of them. Being also belongs with itself before it is divided into
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infinite and finite, and so as it is indifferent to both. Being is first because the other
transcendentals are attributed to being as subject, and something has to be
presupposed as the subject to which they are attributed. 2) Properties or attributes
simply convertible with being, namely one, true, good. 3) Properties disjunctively
convertible with being, namely infinite or finite, transient or permanent, actual or
potential etc. For these properties, like the others, belong to being before it is
divided into kinds. 4) Other pure perfections, or those that can be predicated of God.
For although these perfections are neither simply nor disjunctively convertible with
being, they are true transcendental notions because they are predicable of God, who
is beyond every kind and category belonging only to finite and limited beings.
Note. On the notion of perfection: the term ‘perfect’ (from a verb meaning to carry
through or bring to finished state) signifies ‘complete’ or ‘fully made’. So perfection
is everything that is required for a thing to be called complete or whole. The
complex of all such, whether distinct really or formally or in reason, is called the
total perfection of the thing, but singly they are called partial perfections or, simply,
perfections of the thing. Therefore whatever it is better to have than not to have is a
perfection in whatever has it. Perfections can be divided into: 1) Positive and
negative insofar as what is conceived as perfecting a thing is an entity or being, or a
lack of entity or being. So, for example, humanity, capacity for laughter, head, hand,
eye, thoughts, affections of soul are positive perfections in man. A hollowed finger
(pincers) in an earwig, absence of superfluous weight in a man, and the like are
negative perfections. 2) Essential and existential perfections insofar as the
perfection is conceived as perfecting the thing in what the thing is, for example
simplicity, unity, matter, form etc., or as perfecting it in the way it is, for example
independence, actuality, necessity, contingency. 3) Pure or mixed perfections
insofar as the perfection, in its precise idea, does not or does include some
imperfection. So life, intelligence, freedom include no imperfection while, on the
contrary, matter, composition, reasoning do include imperfection.
There are some who distinguish between predicamental beings and transcendental
being. For the beings we experience are changeable, limited, determinate. Hence,
insofar as any being of this sort under its proper idea as such and such a being, as
dog, thought, sensation etc., falls under one or other predicament and so is called a
predicamental being. But if being is considered precisely as being, that is, as that to
which existence is not repugnant, it is conceived as indifferent to changeability and
unchangeability, determinability and indeterminability, limitation and unlimitation,
etc., and, as such, the notion of being belongs to no kind or predicament, but is
transcendent.
existence. Such an idea is thus verified both of that which here and now actually
exists and of that which, although it does not here and now exist, can exist.
2. Being is the first distinctly conceivable idea of any thing, for it is the first
determinable conceivable element.
Distinct or determinative knowledge is had when that is conceived which is
included in its essential idea. So, for example, man is distinctly conceived as rational
animal, that is, as a substantial being, bodily, organic, sentient, and rational. To the
extent that we can, by such knowledge, distinguish something from everything else
that is precisely not it, the knowledge is said to be distinct. Distinct knowledge is
opposed to confused knowledge, namely when we do not properly conceive the
distinguishing elements so that we cannot say precisely why an animal, for instance,
is precisely an animal and not a plant, although we could, say, distinguish a bull from
an oak tree by reason of their non-essential marks. Hence Scotus says, “something is
said to be confusedly conceived when it is conceived the way it is expressed by its
name, but it is said to be distinctly conceived when it is conceived as it is expressed
by its definition.” But “distinct knowing is had by the definition, which is
investigated by way of division, beginning from ‘being’ until the concept is reached
of the defined thing.” So all our distinct knowledge presupposes the notion of being,
but being does not presuppose any other distinct real notion.
essential part of the modification itself but the subject falls into its definition as
something added on or supplemental (Aristotle, Metaphysics 7.4-5).
diverse but similar concepts corresponded, seek to find a fundamental reason that
being cannot be a genus. Scotus too, however, and his followers, who think the same
simply simple concept of being (common to all created substances) is predicable
univocally both of God and of accidents (provided it is predicated of them as to their
whatness), have equally denied that being is the concept of a genus. They have
argued in the following way: genus and difference, according to Aristotle, are
correlative terms, for genus is defined as “that which is predicated of several things
differing in species by reason of their whatness” (Topics 1.5.102a31). Therefore, if a
concept common to many is not narrowed down by true differences to the things of
which it is univocally said, then it is not a true genus. Now a true specific difference
is only found if the perfection from which the difference is taken or denominated is
not included in the formal idea of the determinable part (that is, of the genus) and
vice versa. In other words, the perfections from which difference and genus are
taken are ideas formally diverse. So, for example, animal is truly a genus and
rational is truly a difference, for rationality, from which rational is derived, is
outside the formal idea of animal, and vice versa. The like must be said of substance
and immaterial, or of body and living, etc. By contrast, if that which narrows down a
highest common idea to its subordinates cannot be conceived (even if considered in
respect of the perfection from which it is denominated) without some notion of that
which is narrowed down, then it is not truly a specific difference but rather an
intrinsic mode. Thus, for example, ‘in itself’ (in-itself-ness) cannot be conceived
without the idea of being, but being can be conceived without its modes. Insofar as
no being is found in reality without some intrinsic mode, for example no being exists
that does not exist either in itself or in another, then when being is conceived
without its modes, namely as being that is indifferent to substance and accident, an
imperfect concept of being-ness is had of any real individual whatever; and such, the
Scotists say, is the concept of transcendental being. But when a being is conceived
according to the intrinsic modes proper to it, then a perfect concept is had of it, and
this concept is not transcendental being as above described. Hence if the name
‘being’ signifies God and creatures, substance and accident, etc. according to their
proper ideas, then we do not yet have one concept but several, and so the name
‘being’ thus taken is not univocally predicated of everything but rather analogically
or equivocally.
But this whole question why being cannot be a genus seems to me of little
moment. For it is commonly conceded today that a composition in concepts does not
argue to a real composition in the thing. For if the formal notion of one perfection
(for example knowing, even if the knowing is omniscient) does not include the
formal notion of another perfection (for example loving, even if the loving is
altogether perfect), then to be sure this fact does not necessarily imply that both
perfections have, in respect of the thing (e.g. God), the idea of parts and so the idea
of being mutually perfectible. But this condition would be required for having
composition on the part of the thing. If we were able to conclude anything from the
conceptual separability of one perfection from another, then some non-identity on
the part of the thing would be proved (as a virtual or so-called formal non-identity,
which we will deal with in the treatment of the formal distinction???). But such a
non-identity implies neither composition nor imperfection in the being that has
those perfections. At most, indeed, a reason is to be sought why one such perfection
is found in the same thing along with another perfection not included in the formal
concept of the first, but I do not know why the only adequate assignable reason for
explaining it must be found in a mutual perfectability (a perfectibility after the
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manner of parts) that those perfections have on the side of the thing. But if anyone
wishes to dispute this question, let him do so.
Since something is not perfectly known unless its opposite is known, we will speak
of two notions that are in some way opposed to being.
On Nothing
‘Nothing’ is here understood in respect of existence and not in respect of
understanding. So nothing, absolutely speaking, is defined as that to which existence
in reality is repugnant. Therefore it is simply lack of the idea of being, whether being
is understood as actual or potential, and is thus the same as the impossible. Of this
sort, for example, would be chimaera, irrational man.
Generally speaking, however, everything that does not actually exist, whether
it can exist or not, is called nothing. The nothing in this sense (which is also called
‘relative nothing’ by some) is merely the lack of actual existence. So, for example, a
golden mountain, not yet conceived offspring, and the like are nothing.
The Scholastics say that nothing has only the whatness of the name and lacks
all true or real whatness, because an existence of this sort in reality is always and
everywhere impossible. On the other hand, if anything were a merely relative
nothing, in that it could exist if God wanted to create it, this sort of thing is said to
have a real essence or whatness.
Note. On the opposition between being and nothing: Insofar as nothing is
understood as non-being, being and nothing seem to be mutually contradictory,
such that it can be said of anything ‘if this is not being it is nothing’. But being is an
equivocal name or, if you wish, an analogical name, and although it is understood in
the same sense (namely as transcendental being in the way explained above), it can
be predicated of any subject in diverse ways, namely of the whatness,
denominatively, really, formally, per se, per accident etc. So the above conclusion
does indeed follows if being is denied in the same sense as nothing is said to be
simply non-being and if, further, being is denied of the same subject as nothing is
affirmed of. For example, it is plain that nothing does not contradict being as that to
which existence is not repugnant unless nothing is understood absolutely and not
just relatively. Further if transcendental being is taken formally it opposes, as is
evident, not only nothing absolutely but its own proper attributes and intrinsic
modes as well, for being is referred to these formally as something potential and
determinable to something actual and determining, or as something modified to its
modification. Nevertheless, these notions are not formally nothing, because they
express some perfection on the part of the thing that the notion of being does not
formally express. Logically speaking (Aristotle Metaphysics 7.4-5), a subject enters
in some way into the definition of its attributes or features but not in their
whatness, and so a subject cannot be predicated of its features in the first mode of
per se predication in the way that animal, for example, can be predicated in the first
per se mode of man or being of substance or of God. For the notion of animal enters
into the notion of man as to his whatness, that is, as a determinable part in his
essential concept, to wit as his genus, and similarly the notion of being enters into
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the notion of God or substance, not indeed as genus but as ultimate determinable
element into which the essential notion of God or substance can be resolved. Now
the reason that a subject cannot be predicated in the whatness of its essential
attributes and differences is as follows: an attribute cannot properly be defined, as
Aristotle shows in the passage just cited. For although an attribute cannot be
conceived save as related to some subject to which it is attributed, nevertheless this
relation is a relation of opposition, namely the relation between a determinable and
a determinant and so involves a certain mutual exclusion if opposite notions are
formally considered. Hence the subject, as Scholastics say, enters into the definition
of attributes as something added, that is, as something extrinsic and so outside their
formal whatness considered in itself. Briefly then, the notion of transcendental being
can be quidditatively predicated, and even predicated univocally according to
Scotists, of any real concept that is not simply simple, namely of the concept of God,
of individuals, of species, of genera, and the like (which we will deal with more fully
below). But it cannot be predicated quidditatively of the ultimate differences and
proper features of being but, on the contrary, they can be predicated of
transcendental being either in the second per se mode if they are attributes (namely
true, good, or finite-infinite disjunctively) or per accidens, logically speaking, if they
are an ultimate difference of any being, for example infinite, substantial, finite etc.
But as far as the notion of being enters into this sort of definition, at least as
something extrinsically added, being can be predicated of them, namely of infinite,
substantial, etc., to the extent these notions are taken denominatively, that is, insofar
as these concepts directly supposit for their subject, namely being, and indirectly
connote infinity or in-itself-ness respectively – just as we can say that the masculine,
denominatively taken, is animal or that the odd is number. Being as a name, then,
can equivocally signify both something of which being can be quidditatively
predicated (and indeed univocally according to Scotists), and everything that it can
predicate of transcendental being, for example an attribute or ultimate difference or
intrinsic mode. Indeed, of any intelligible real perfection it can be simply said that it
is a being or not a being, and so either that it is a being or that it is nothing. But it
cannot be said that everything is either quidditatively a being or is nothing, nor that
everything is either formally a being or nothing, because there is here a fallacy of
simply and in a certain respect. We can, however, say that everything that is in no
way a being, whether quidditatively or denominatively, is nothing. In like manner
we cannot say that every real perfection, on the part of a thing, that is not expressed
formally by the name of being transcendentally taken is nothing. We can, however,
concede that all things are nothing if being, when so taken, either cannot be
predicated of them quidditatively or cannot be predicated of some subject that
includes them at least qualitatively.
On Being of Reason
Etymologically a being of reason (or a thing of the mind) signifies that whose being-
ness depends in some way on the intellect. In this rather broad sense, being of
reason can be understood in three ways.
1. As effect, namely insofar as it depends on the intellect as an effect on its
cause. Hence, whatever is elaborated by reason is called a being of reason, as are, for
example, ideas in the mind of the artist, abstraction, judgment, attention etc.
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“Now the subject of divine science is that which is common to everything, namely
existence simply and absolutely. But what is investigated in this science is what follows
existence itself insofar as it is existence simply, and these are substance and accident,
universal and singular, one and many, cause and caused, in potency and in fact,
suitable and unsuitable, what ought or has to be and what is possible, and the like. For
all these follow existence from the fact that it is being; but not as triangulation and
quadration do, which are consequent to being only after measure has come to be; nor
as even and odd do, which are consequent to being after there is a subject of one of
these two arts, namely mathematics and physics; these things, to be sure, do not belong
to the consideration of this divine science. But there falls into this science the
consideration of the cause of universal existence. For being is divided into cause and
caused, and there is consideration of the unity of the cause and that it necessarily
exists, and consideration of its properties and that other beings depend on it and how
they have flowed from it.” Algazel, Metaphysics, preface.
21
term; nor can the part of the disjunctive that is contingent be proved of something
when necessary is supposed of something. And so it seems that the proposition
‘some being is contingent’ is a primary truth, and not provable by a demonstration
stating the ‘why’.
taken entitatively or as entity, and signifies that being has the whole of its entity at
once or as not divided and separated into parts. In the second part of the division
being is taken numerically, and signifies that being is not multiple. Being is first and
foremost one thing (not a loose collection of parts); secondarily being is one thing
and not two things, or three or more things.
is what the formal idea is by which a common and specific nature becomes
altogether incommunicable and individual. Various solutions have been proposed,
but first one must note that the controversy is confined to created beings only. For
the divine nature, according to all authors, is essentially individual by reason of its
infinity. Created natures, on the contrary, since they are finite or limited in being, do
not exhaust by reason of their specific essences the possibility for manyness within
the species; in other words, they do not become altogether incommunicable or
individual by reason of their specific essence. Every created thing, therefore, needs
some other reason outside its specific nature in order to become altogether
incommunicable to another. Actual existence, accidents, designated matter,
haecceity, etc. are some of the ideas proposed as the formal reason or principle that
individuates. Best known among these are the following:
Many things can be urged against this opinion, and among others that it does
not seem to explain why matter itself is individual. Thomists do say indeed that
matter has a transcendental relation to this quantity rather than to that, but if one
asks why this quantity is this quantity and not that, the reply they give is that it is in
this individual substance. Further, if the intrinsic reason why a form is individual is
to be looked for in something really distinct from it, namely in matter or its
transcendental relation to matter, an unacceptable consequence seems to arise:
either the form in its real order would be formally in itself something universal, for
form is really distinct but not separate from matter; or the form would be formally
individuated in the sense that it would have in itself (though not from itself but from
matter) some perfection over and above its specific perfection, namely the
perfection of individuality. If the former then something formally universal would
seem to exist on the side of the thing, which is impossible and never admitted by
Aquinas. If the latter, then form would receive its ultimate degree of actuality and
perfection (in the order of essence) from a material principle; but a material
principle is said to be pure potency and much more imperfect than form (for matter
has its actuality given it by form) .
4. Personal Opinion
What then should be said about this controversy? We can reply first that the
solution of this problem must be looked for in the particular way that the human
mind knows conceptually or definitively. For the intellectual investigation of any
27
individual object is always done through ideas that can be predicated of this and any
other individual in common. For the unknown is to be defined through the known,
the new through the old, the present through the known past. One should not be
surprised, then, if we are unable to exhaust the intelligibility of an individual
through ideas that are not individuating but common, for in such an analysis
something is always left remaining that Scholastics call the individuating formal
reason. So this reason is only known confusedly (that is, as a part of the intelligible
whole that the individual is), and never distinctly in a strict sense; for distinct
knowledge is what arises through a process of division and definition, and hence is
always done through common notions, namely genus and specific difference. To the
extent that a distinct definition or knowledge is to be looked through the question
‘what is it?’, it is vain to ask, for instance, ‘what is the idea that precisely individuates
this man as Peter?’ For this question is such that an answer is precluded. In this
sense, therefore, let us say with Ockham that “anything outside the soul will itself be
a this and no cause of its individuation is to be looked for…but rather a cause must
be looked for as to how something common and universal is possible.”
But on the other hand, the way of proceeding of St. Thomas, Scotus, Suarez
(beginning not from the thing outside the soul but rather from the distinct concept
of the thing) is intelligible enough. Since such distinct knowledge contains only what
is common and since common ideas never exhaust an individual, the question what
will remain if the common or specific nature is subtracted from the individual is
legitimately asked. For since what remains from such abstraction will always be
something extra or something over and above the essence or common nature, one
should not be surprised that existence, matter, accidents, hecceity have been
proposed by different philosophers as the principle of individuation; for these are
all conceived as something beyond and outside the essence or Aristotelian form or
substance or common nature. Nor is it surprising that, if understanding is of
universals, Aquinas, Scotus, Suarez said that the proper idea that individuates Peter,
say, cannot be known in this life. For, according to Thomas, matter as it is pure
potency is not intelligible, and likewise for Scotus the proper hecceity of something
cannot, at least in this life, be known to us.
This intrinsic defect in our conceptual faculty causes very many other
philosophical difficulties, as, for instance, the reason why existence cannot be
completely explained through essential ideas, why free will cannot be understood
through notions taken from the causality of other causes that do not act freely, or
why generally any original experience cannot be totally explained through anything
other than itself. From this consideration too we see why the unity of God is
something to be proved, for since in this life we lack a direct intuition of God, all the
concepts we can have of God (even those most proper to him, as infinite being,
supreme good etc.) are concepts made up of universals (see part 3, chapter 1, article
3). And because the parts or positive conceptual elements from which such concepts
are composed (for example ‘being’, ‘good’, ‘supreme’ etc.) are common to God and
creatures, it is also not surprising that the very composed concept is conceived as
indifferent to one and many. So we have to prove that God is one even though this
unity is in fact a necessary and immediate property of infinite being.
28
On Universal Concepts
About universals two things need to be noted, 1) that as a matter of fact the human
intellect forms, and forms naturally, universal concepts of natural signs that can
supposit for several individuals, as man, house, horse, etc., and 2) that such concepts
are never formed save because of something found or perceived in things
themselves. Hence the question arises about what is required on the part of the
thing as foundation of this universal. There are four main opinions.
1. Absolute realism is the view that says that something truly universal exists
outside the mind. Plato, for instance, postulated a special place or world of ideas
where are found the ideal man, the ideal horse, ideal virtue, prudence etc. When
once the human soul had come to dwell in this world, but perhaps because of some
original sin, it was thrown out and united to a body endowed with senses. And now,
when we perceive an individual man, for instance, who is some participation in the
ideal man, we are reminded of this universal man (Phaedo 76ff.). According to
others, however, this universal outside the mind is in some way found in individual
singulars, so that there is a complete correspondence between the thing and the
understanding.
2. Moderate or mitigated realism is the view according to which, although the
formal universal is only in the mind, there is nevertheless found in the things
themselves, e.g. singular horses, some perfection or quality, e.g. horse-ness, which as
such, or considered in itself, is neither universal (that is, not predicable of many) nor
singular (that is, not communicable to many). So Avicenna (Metaphysics 5.1) says
that horse-ness is just horse-ness, not of itself being either single or many or
universal or particular; and so similarly Thomas (On Being and Essence 4) and
Scotus (Oxon. 2 d.3 q.1 n.7). To the extent that this nature or essence or quiddity
29
On Identity
Identity means the same entity, so that those things are said to be the same if they
have the same entity. Logically speaking identity is the affirmation of one thing of
another.
It is impossible in fact to distinguish various kinds or degrees of identity, but
for our purposes it is enough if we remember that identity is reciprocally related to
distinction, so that the greater the identity the less the distinction and vice versa.
On Distinction
Distinction means lack of identity between several things. Those things too are said
to be distinct one of which is not the other. But be careful not to confuse identity
with unity. For unity is lack of division and not lack of distinction.
1. Distinction before a work of the mind (actual distinction from the nature of
the thing) is a lack of identity that does not arise from an operation of the mind but
is found in things by the mind. It is:
A. A distinction is real (simply real) if it exists between thing and thing, for
example between body and soul, between the members of he body, between
cause and effect, between a faculty and its operation, between substance and
accidents. A thing, at least according to Scotists, is whatever exists or can
exist per se (i.e. through its own existence), and hence, if it is created, it can
be directly and immediately produced by physical causality. The sign of a real
distinction is separability or actual separation. Thomists, on the contrary,
deny that separability is required for having a real distinction. So they say,
for example, that faculties are really distinct from the soul though they
cannot be separated from it. One must say the like of their real distinction
between essence and existence.1
B. A distinction is formal (real in a certain respect) according to Scotists and
others, if it exists between realities and formalities, for example between the
soul and its faculties, between the faculties themselves, between the
metaphysical essence and its properties, between the various perfections or
metaphysical degrees, between the attributes of God, between the divine
nature and the divine Persons, between the principle of individuation and the
specific essence. A formality (or reality) is something positive included in a
real being which, although it does not and cannot exist by itself, can be
conceived in a clear and distinct concept in abstraction from any other
formality of the same thing that it belongs to. The sign of a formal distinction
includes three things: a) ability to be conceived in a concept that is not only
distinct but also complete and exclusive; b) such that what is conceived is not
a thing but something of a thing; c) inseparability from the thing it belongs to.
A formal distinction is fully defined as “a distinction in the nature of the thing
that comes between several formalities identified in reality, one of which can
be conceived without the other before any work of the intellect, although it
cannot exist without the other even by divine power.”
1
Many things that Scotists reckon to be formally distinct Thomists, because to their diverse norms of
judging, number under real distinction or under distinction of reason with a foundation in the thing.
31
On Inadequate Distinction
2B. Jansen, “Beiträge zür geschichtlichen Entwicklung der Distinctio formalis,” Zeitschrift für katholische
Theologie, LIII (1929) 317ff. M. Grajewski, op. cit. ch.6.
32
We can distinguish between adequate and inadequate distinction. The first is if the
things said to be distinct are as it were equal or equivalent, as is the case with all the
distinctions above adduced. A distinction is inadequate if the distinct things are not
equal, so that one includes the other but not conversely. Such inadequate
distinctions flourish, for example, between the whole and its part, or between a
subject and its mode, for a mode includes the subject it modifies and the whole
includes its parts. These sort of inadequate distinctions, as is plain, can be real (for
example between the human body and an arm), or formal (for example between
soul and intellect, between animality and sense feeling, between formality and its
mode, as between divine wisdom and the same thing’s infinity), or logical (for
instance between the rays of the sun and their power of heating). Also here can be
added real negative distinctions, which flourish not between thing and thing but
between a thing and a negation of it (for example between man and blindness).
some being and its ceasing to be, then we have got something relatively permanent.
Now whatever may be said about this argument, it certainly seems that a being
which begins to be from nothing and then immediately afterwards altogether ceases
to be, without any interval at all of duration, if it does not simply involve a
contradiction, cannot exist in time at any rate and cannot naturally be known by us.
Moreover, if such instants of immediate annihilation after production be multiplied
even endlessly, they can never explain the experience of continuity that we in fact
have. For just as a line is not the mere addition of points infinite in number, so
neither is a continuous period of time the mere addition or sum of instants that lack,
in themselves, all duration in time.
This reasoning is confirmed by the fact that existence or being, namely the
being we experience and which is the starting point for our metaphysical
speculations cannot be conceived without duration. On the basis of this concession I
argue as follows: although beginning to be or ceasing to be are said to happen in an
instant or a moment, one may not argue that therefore we can have creation
followed immediately afterwards without any duration by annihilation, just as
neither may one argue: a point is the end of a line and as such lacks all dimension, so
there can be two points so close together that no distance intervenes between them.
Accordingly we can say that beginning to be cannot be had without duration, not
precisely because a beginning directly includes duration (for it happens in an
instant), but because beginning to be is impossible without existence and because
existence involves duration. The like must be said of ceasing to be, or ceasing to be
thus.
because it would be indifferent to existing and would not have in itself a reason for
existing; independent because nothing would exist outside the series for it to
depend on, otherwise it would not be an infinite series since limited and brought to
an end in the being on which it depends.3 By such a series then cannot be explained
why something exists. This argument is confirmed by an example. Who would say
that a sufficient reason for the suspension of the whole of a chain could be found in
the length itself of the chain even though it could not be found in any ring of the
chain?
b) Similarly a circle of mutually dependent things involves a contradiction
unless we suppose a sufficient cause outside the circle as such. Otherwise every
individual cause would be the total cause of itself and so would be dependent and
independent, caused and uncaused, at the same time, which is manifestly absurd.
c) If a) and b) are excluded c) is what is left. So in every case there must be a
being altogether independent as to its existence and its permanence.
This argument can be formulated scientifically in Aristotle’s sense, or
through necessary principles, as follows:
If something can exist then it must be either transient or absolutely
permanent. If it can be transient it can be relatively permanent. If something
relatively permanent can exist, something altogether independent as to its being
and persisting, and so absolutely independent, can exist. But if a being independent
as to its existing does not in fact exist then such a being cannot exist, because it does
not get its existence from another. Therefore if something can exist, an absolutely
permanent being in fact exists.
3
The fundamental reason that an infinite series of simultaneously existing dependent or conditioned beings
is impossible is not found precisely in the fact that such a supposition supposes an infinite number of
simultaneously existing real things (which Scholastics commonly reckon to be a contradiction), but rather
because it denies there is a first or unconditioned and independent being on which the other beings in the
series depend. Since each member of the series would be indifferent to existing and would require
something outside itself from which to receive existence, every such member would not only be unable to
sustain the members below it but would also make addition of its own dependence and increase the weight,
as it were, or the tendency to return to nothing. Hence, by extending the series even to infinity, no one can
explain why the series itself exists, but rather the difficulty is made greater by increase of the number of
dependent things, and so too of the power of the cause to which the members of the series would owe their
existence. Briefly then, if an infinite series of dependent things were possible, then a fortiori there would be
required an infinitely powerful cause for sustaining such a series in existence. But a cause of this sort would
be a being of itself, for no cause that would owe its existence and power of causing to something else could
be infinitely powerful. In other words if, per impossibile, there were such an infinite series of
simultaneously existing things, an infinitely powerful being would still be required on which all the
members below it would depend. Since such a being would be outside the series (insofar as it would be
infinitely powerful and so dependent on no higher member) and nevertheless not outside the series (because
all the members below it would depend on it), the notion of such an infinite series seems to contain a virtual
contradiction.
36
4 Many Scholastics, who deny Aristotle’s doctrine about the eternity and uncreatability of the angels and
the intelligences, made room for a duration intermediate between eternity and time, namely ‘aevum’ and
‘aeviternity’. Alexander of Hales, for example, says, “The aevum is the duration of a thing that has
existence after non-existence but that, like things perpetual, is irreversible to non-existence” (Summa 1.1
tract.2). It is the duration of that which is unchangeable substantially but changeable accidentally as to its
acting. Some philosophers, Ockham for example, do well to deny that there is any essential difference
between time and this ‘created eternity’ or ‘aevum’, for whatever has existence after non-existence is
reversible into non-existence, and so does not possess its existence all at once but successively. Further,
mere change in action is sufficient for measuring duration according to before and after. Hence it is better
to say that things essentially and things accidentally changeable are in time.
37
5 St. Thomas’ First way, even if it is not perhaps valid for proving the existence of God, does prove that
there is an unmoved mover. But see below on this matter.
38
On ‘Principle’
Every cause is a principle of some sort. So one must first explain the notion of
principle so that the notion of cause may be understood. A principle is defined as
that from which something in some way proceeds. That which proceeds is called the
‘principiate’, or what has been ‘principled’.
Between principle and principled there must be some connection. If this
connection is merely external and without any inflowing of the principle to the
principled, the principle is better referred to as a ‘beginning’. If, on the other hand,
the connection is internal and consists in a positive inflowing of one to the other, the
first is properly called a principle. Dawn is the principle of a day in the sense of
beginning, and likewise the point in respect of a line. Parents with respect to their
children, on the contrary, are properly called principles.
The positive inflowing between principle and principled can be either logical
or real. An inflowing is logical if the principle is the reason that the principled is
known. OI this way the premises of a syllogism are principles with respect to the
conclusion (of science). The inflowing is real or ontological if the principle gives
being to the principled.6
6 Among philosophers an ontological principle is the same as a cause. Theologians however distinguish
between a principle that is a cause and one that is not a cause. A principle that is not a cause communicates
its own proper being such that the nature of the giver and of the receiver is numerically the same. Thus in
the Sacred Trinity the Father is the principle of the Son but is not the cause of the Son. A principle is called
a cause only if it communicates an existence or being-ness that is numerically distinct from itself.
7 ‘Of something else’ because every cause, even a material or formal cause, is really distinct from its effect,
The cause precedes the caused by a priority of nature. For priority is multiple: a)
There is priority of time if one thing precedes another in duration, as a father in
respect of his children. b) There is priority of nature if one thing is from another,
whether this other precedes in time or not, as substance in respect of its
simultaneously existing accidents. c) There is priority of origin if one thing
proceeds from another or others, as in the procession of the Divine Persons where
the Father precedes the Son without causality or dependence. d) There is priority of
ontological reason if one thing is conceived so to precede another that the prior
either is precisely the reason that the posterior exists or is at any rather a necessary
condition of the existence of the posterior, as thinking precedes willing. That these
kinds of priority do not mutually exclude each other is plain.
A cause is sometimes distinguished both form a condition and from an
occasion. Now condition can be taken broadly as everything because of whose
absence something else cannot be, and in this sense condition includes cause. But
condition can be taken in opposition to cause, namely as that which disposes or
applies a cause or removes an obstacle so that the cause may have its influence
though it itself has no influence. So, for example, knowing is said to be a condition
for an act of will, and vision is a condition for driving a vehicle, etc. If a condition is
absolutely necessary it is called a condition sine qua non. An occasion, on the other
hand, is that by whose presence something comes to be, as night or a large crowd of
men is an occasion for theft. To the extent that an occasion provides a motive for
acting, to that extent it is said to have the idea of a moral cause stimulating the will
to act. We speak in this sense of an occasion of sin. But a motive is not truly a cause
with respect to the will; it moves in a very metaphorical sense.
Division of Causes
According to Aristotle causes fall into four kinds, namely efficient, final, material,
formal.
An efficient cause is defined as the principle that determines by its action the
existence of something else. An artisan, for instance, is the efficient cause of a table.
A final cause is that because of which the efficient cause acts. Thus the artisan acts
perhaps for glory, money etc. But note that a final cause is not called a cause with
respect to the efficient cause but with respect to the effect that the efficient cause
produces. A final cause only metaphorically moves the efficient cause.8 The material
cause is the presupposed subject out of which the efficient cause produces the effect,
for example the marble or wood out of which the artisan produces a table.
‘Presupposed’ here is understood not in the sense of priority in time but priority in
8 Translator’s note: the final cause is more properly described as the specification of the efficiency of the
efficient cause. It states what the efficient cause, qua efficient cause, is efficient of. A carpenter may make a
table for honor or money but in the making itself he makes it according to the plan of the table he has in
mind, and it is this plan that determines his efficient causality. So, as a maker of the table, the carpenter is
a ‘table-making’ efficient cause. The same applies to inanimate efficient causes like fire and water. For
fire, as an efficient cause of heating, is a ‘heat-inducing’ cause, and water, as an efficient cause of cooling,
is a ‘cold-inducing’ cause. Without such specification of the causality of the efficient cause, no efficient
cause can be described or understood as efficient. For an efficient cause is efficient precisely because it is
efficient of something, and to state what, qua efficient, it is efficient of (table, heat, cold) is to state the final
cause. Thus efficient, final, and formal cause are, as Aristotle remarked, in a sense the same: the final
cause is what the efficient cause is efficient of, and the formal cause is the final cause as realized by the
efficient cause in the matter.
40
nature. The formal cause is that which intrinsically constitutes the effect in some
class of things, as for example the shape of a table brought about in a piece of wood.
The efficient and final causes are external or extrinsic causes; the material
and formal causes are intrinsic or internal causes. The causality of the matter and
form are nothing other than the mutual and immediate sharing of their proper
being-ness so that a third composite being-ness may arise. Matter is the
determinable subject; form is the determining reality.
Alongside these four kinds of causes others number a fifth cause, namely the
exemplar cause. The exemplar is said to be the idea that the efficient cause gazes at
so as to produce an effect after its own likeness. However, according to most
Scholastics the exemplar cause is reduced to the efficient or final or formal cause: to
the efficient insofar as the exemplar is nothing other than the idea in the mind of the
artisan, who is the efficient cause;9 to the formal insofar as the exemplar as
reproduced in the effect is nothing other than the form that is educed by the agent
from the potency of the matter; to the final insofar as the educing of this form is
what the agent immediately intends by his action.
9 Translator’s note: an artisan has a mind to conceive the effect he wishes to produce, but fire and water
and other efficient causes clearly do not. For the latter the exemplar or final cause is their own nature as
hot or cold which, by acting on something else, they communicate to that something else. In another (and
more Platonic) sense the exemplar cause may be considered as the complete or perfect idea of something,
which need not be realized as such anywhere in fact (it would exist, nevertheless, as an idea in God’s mind
which contains, at least virtually, all possible perfections).
10
Although neo-Scholastics generally admit causality to be a necessary truth, and to be indeed, as they say,
metaphysically certain, yet they dispute both about the best way to formulate this causal proposition and
about the origin and evidence of the principle. For the history of the problem see L. de Raeymacker, The
Philosophy of Being (St. Louis, Herder, 1954) 257ff, and J. Owens ‘The Causal Proposition — Principle or
Conclusion?” Modern Schoolman 32 (1955) 159ff.
41
11
“Explanation is an inveterate human tendency. Even philosophers who think we cannot attain to
knowledge of causes get involved in explaining why that is so. Nor will their disputes about the theory of
causes ever remove the word ‘because’ from the vocabulary of common speech. It is as unavoidable as the
words ‘is’.” Tolstoy. The Great Ideas, ed. Adler, vol.1 p.155 (Chicago, 1952)
12
Leibniz, Discourse on Metaphysics, 2-3, 23, Monadology nn. 31-37, 53-54.
13
Although the principle of sufficient reason, as we explain it below, is implicitly contained in the teaching
of the Scholastics, the way of speaking of it as a special principle arose at the time of Leibniz and Wolff
(18th century), who introduced the famous system of sufficient reason. Their principles destroy true
freedom of both God and man and lead logically to absolute optimism. These principles are thus expressed
by an author of the same 18th century: “First, a free and rational will cannot in any way determine itself to
anything without a motive or reason; for the will of a free agent is ruled by reason, by reason is it removed
from indifference, by reason is it determined to acting. A reason or motive of this sort can be both intrinsic
and extrinsic, but distinct from the exercise and determination of the will in the way that the mover is
distinct from the what is moved. Second, hence without an intrinsic or extrinsic motive distinct from the
exercise and determination of the will, a rational free will cannot in any way determine itself and act; and if
it did so by chance, it would not determine itself or act by reason. Third, when there are two equal and
opposite reasons or motives, free will must remain undecided, unmoved, in suspense, since its indifference
is not taken away by either of them. For if in this case it were to determine itself, it would do so without
any motive for determining itself rather than not, which is repugnant to the nature of a free agent and to its
essence. Fourth, in order for a free agent to be able to determine itself to action rather than non-action or to
choice of one thing over another, some motive is necessarily required that would move the will to action
rather than not, or to choice of this rather than that; for just as it cannot be conceived to be or become
something unless it be granted that it is or comes to be rather than does not, so it cannot be conceived to act
without a motive. Fifth, such a motive because of which a free agent wills or acts rather than not is said to
be the sufficient reason. Sixth, this sufficient reason is said to be the prevailing reason because, by
prevailing over the other things that are offered, it moves the free agent to will rather than not, or to will in
this way rather than another. Seventh, this prevailing reason is said to be infallible, or to be infallibly
connected to action, because, once this reason is in place, there is action rather than not, and it is impossible
that, once it is in place, there should not be rather than be action, just as it is impossible for the same thing
to be and not be. Eighth, this sufficient, prevailing, and infallible reason exists antecedently and
independently of the actual free volition or determination of the will, so that it is not prevalent and infallible
because the will wills, but rather the will wills because it is prevalent and infallible. Ninth, hence actual free
volition is dependent on a reason or motive, and it is inferior, in nature and causality, to the reason or
motive, since what moves the agent to will is prior in nature and causality to volition itself, as is plain from
42
seems to destroy freedom in God the Creator, for this sufficient reason cannot be
found in anything extrinsic to God, otherwise the divine willing would be caused;
nor can it be found in anything intrinsic to God besides the willing itself, such as in
God’s essential goodness or in the goodness of the divine exemplar ideas etc.,
otherwise creation would not be free but necessary, for God possesses necessarily
his essential goodness or exemplar ideas. Everything indeed formally other than
God’s very volition that is required for that volition to be present, such as divine
knowledge, God’s goodness etc. can be called necessary reasons or conditions but
they are not properly sufficient reasons in Leibniz’s sense, because a sufficient
reason is such that, if it is present, the existence of something necessarily follows;
otherwise the reason would not be sufficient.
Second, sufficient reason can be understood broadly, namely as including the
very will of God (as his will of creating in time), such that we can say that this
volition to create suffices to explain creation, for if God wants to create, this is
sufficient for creation to be, and if he does not will to create, or wants to create
another world different from this world that he has in fact created, the creation
which we now have would not exist. In this broader sense the principle of sufficient
reason is found at least implicitly among Scholastics, and should be included among
“the unshakeable metaphysical principles” of the philosophy that “has existed now
for a long time as a patrimony handed down from earlier Christian ages, and
possesses too an authority of so much higher an order because the Magisterium
itself of the Church has weighed the principles and chief assertions of it, gradually
made plain and defined by men of great genius, on the scales of divine revelation
itself” (Pius XII, Humani Generis, AAS 42, Sept.2, 1950, 571-2).
With this proposition about sufficient reason admitted as a principle, the
proposition about causality can be considered as a special application of the
principle, for if anything lacks in itself a complete reason for its existence then it has it
in another, namely in a cause. But there are other formulations of the principle of
causality, as for example that there is no effect without a cause. Indeed this
proposition is analytic because it is tautological, for the definitions of cause and
effect include each other; but it seems useless because it lacks any norm for judging
whether an effect and so a cause is really present. There are other formulations that
avoid this difficulty, namely whatever begins to exist has an efficient cause of itself or
whatever is limited or contingent has an efficient cause of itself. The former lacks the
universality of other formulations because it does not include ‘eternal creature’,
which other philosophers, as Aquinas, think is possible or at least not absurd.
Nevertheless the necessity of having a cause in the case of something that begins to
the notion of mover and moved. Tenth, such infallibility or infallible connection of sufficient reason with
the action comes from the character, nature, and essence of a free agent insofar as he is free; for the proper
mode of his acting is determined from the character of a free agent insofar as he is free. Eleventh, hence is a
free agent defined, because he determines himself to action by an objectively indifferent judgment.
Twelfth, freedom is called a faculty of choosing from several possibilities the one that is more pleasing
agreeably to the motives proposed by an indifferent judgment of reason. Or as Wolff has it, the faculty
whereby the mind chooses of its own accord from several possibilities the one that most pleases it, since it
is determined by essence to none of them.” Mansuetus of St. Felix OSA, On the Conflict between the
System of Sufficient Reason and Human Freedom and… Cremona 1755.
43
of all rational men, the burden of proving this assumption rests on the sort of
stubborn person who, without positive reason and dismissing all indications to the
contrary, postulates that the existence of what begins to be altogether lacks
intelligibility. Let him who can embrace this absurdity embrace it; but such a one is
not a philosopher but a lover rather of obscurity.
Some Conclusions
16. In the same class of essentially ordered causes the series cannot be
infinite, for otherwise there would be an actually infinite series of simultaneously
existing dependent things, which is impossible (from conclusion 4). Hence there
cannot be an infinite series of essentially ordered efficient causes. The like must be
said of final causes, or of material or formal causes.
17. A circle of essentially ordered causes cannot exist as independent or
uncaused in itself (conclusion 5). Since a circle of causes must always be understood
of things simultaneously existing, this conclusion extends to every circle of causes.
18. A material cause does not behave as matter unless the formal cause forms
it and vice versa. The point is plain from the definitions of these causes, for unless
that which is composed of both exists, matter and form cannot have an inflow on the
thing caused. Herefrom follows another conclusion, namely:
19. If something has behaved as mater, something else has behaved as form,
and vice versa.
20. What is not effected is not caused by a final cause. The point is plain from
the definitions of each, for the final cause is that for the sake of which the efficient
cause produces the effect; therefore it causes only by mediation of the efficient
becomes different later it either ceases to be equal to itself or ceases to be either from another or from itself
or from nothing. But in fact the principles of identity and contradiction do seem sufficient to prove the
principle of causality in the way Wolter summarizes: a thing is what it is and if it becomes more than it is,
and this becoming more is not an operating of one part of it on another part of it (as walking is a working
of legs on the rest of the body and a working itself worked on by desire), then this becoming more comes
from another and not from itself. Otherwise the same identical thing would be both more and not more,
contrary to the principles of identity and contradiction. This other will then be the cause (by definition).
45
cause. This conclusion can thus be formulated in another way, namely that if
something depends on a final cause it also depends on an efficient cause.
21. What is not effected is not mattered or formed, or, if something is caused
by a material and formal cause, it is also caused by an efficient cause. For matter and
form are parts; therefore they are in themselves indifferently disposed to forming
one thing. Therefore something in the order of efficient cause is required to effect
this one thing. Here nothing is said about whether the efficient cause is the same
really as matter (as seems to be the case with atoms) or not.
We will speak mainly about efficient causes, for unless these sort of causes are
capable of existing neither are formal, material, and final causes possible.
In general contingent and necessary are understood with respect to the possibility
or impossibility of something being otherwise than in fact it is. Nevertheless there
seems to be some discrepancy among authors about the notion of contingent being,
and indeed in accord with this broad definition we can ask whether contingent
being is opposed disjunctively to necessary being, as is plain from the teaching of
Avicenna, who taught that creatures are simultaneously necessary and non-
necessary or contingent. For a creature, he says, is contingent (or ‘possible to be’)
insofar as its essence is indifferent to existing or not existing. Hence if such a
creature does in truth exist, it receives existence from another being or cause. On
the other side, however, since everything (according to Avicenna) proceeds from
God in a necessary way, even beings possible in themselves would be necessary in
their cause such that, when some creature, say a fetus, begins to be, the conclusion
could be drawn that it is impossible for this fetus not to have been created in this
moment when in fact it was created, and this because of the coming together of
necessarily acting causes.
48
15 This opinion is the common one among Christian philosophers, according to whom only one single being
is necessary, namely God. Other beings are contingent, so that all creatures, by the fact they are from
another, namely from God causing freely, are contingent. We indeed share this opinion and it is the
opinion, among Scholastics of the Middle Ages, of Scotus, Ockham, and many others, thought not of St.
Thomas, for he understood contingency in respect to substantial changeability so that, if any being lacked
matter (which is thought to be the root of contingency to the extent it is in potency to another form), such a
being would have necessary existence (Thomas De Potentia q.5 a.3, Contra Gentes 2.25). Hence he says
that not only is God a necessary being but also the angels, for example, or the created intelligences to which
are in some attributed the motions of the heavenly spheres. This opinion seems to be a mean between the
straight Christian doctrine of creationism and the the straight position of the pagan philosophers who
postulated a plurality of eternal and created beings, namely matter and the secondary intelligences. This
49
necessary caused being until the opposite is proved. For many philosophers have
taught that the first uncaused being produced other things necessarily. In which
case not only would the first being be necessary but so would the beings produced
by it be necessary.
Scotus has well observed that the ultimate root of contingency is free will, for, in the
system of absolute determinism, whatever happened would be necessary in its
causes. It is plain that the opposite of something could only be when that something
in fact comes to be if it depends immediately or at least mediately on a free cause,
name on a cause that, when everything is given for acting that must be given, has it
in its own power to act or not to act, or to act in this way or in some other way.
Hence let a free cause be defined as a cause that in acting is undetermined
either by anything outside itself and by its own nature as a being. Therefore, when
all conditions outside it for acting are given, it has within it the power to act rather
than not to act (liberty of contradictories), or to act in one rather than in another
(liberty of contraries). So for us free cause is by definition the same as free will.
A cause, therefore, that contingently causes is either such a free cause or is a
non-free cause that truly depends for its existing or its causing on a free cause. So
we can distinguish between a free cause and a contingently causing cause.16 For
even if a cause depends on a free first cause and thus is a contingent causer, it can be
a non-free cause. Such a cause is even called by Scotus a natural cause or a cause
that acts by way of nature; for any cause is a natural one that is determined by its
nature to one way of acting when all necessary givens are given. It is also called a
cause that is hypothetically or in a certain respect necessary.
mediate position is intimately connected with the opinion about the aevum or ‘created eternity’, of which
mention was made above. Whatever one should say about this opinion and its dubious foundation (namely
the theory of Thomistic hylomorphism), the following seems at least certain: If anything is creatable and
annihilable, even if it not be changeable in substance, yet it would be true to say that such a being, by
God’s will, could have not existed in the moment when in fact it does exist. Hence our definition holds true
of contingent being in the strict sense.
16 A cause is a contingently causing cause if it be able not to cause in the moment when it does in fact
Some Conclusions
35. Whatever exists from itself (is either in-effectible or independent) is a
necessary being. This point follows from the definitions.
36. Whatever exists contingently not only has in another the reason for its
existence but receives existence from a cause that causes contingently and not
necessarily.
37. Everything caused either immediately or mediately by a free cause is
contingent, and conversely every contingent being is caused immediately or
mediately by a free cause.
38. Every cause that causes contingently is either itself a free will or depends
for its existence or its causing on a free cause.
39. If there is some contingent being, there is some necessary being. This
conclusion is proved as follows: If there is something contingent such a thing is
caused (from conclusion 36), and consequently is dependent (from conclusion 38).
But a dependent being implies a being from itself (from conclusion 32), and
therefore a being from itself necessarily exists (from conclusion 35).
The passage is easy from the consideration of transient or changeable being to the
notions of act and potency, for act (energeia) took its origin, according to Aristotle
(Metaphysics 9.3.1047a30), mainly from motion, and potency primarily signifies the
force or ability or power of changing another qua another (9.1.1046a10).17
On Logical Possibility
Two notions are said to be logically compatible if the affirmation of one does not
involve the denial of the other. This idea of logical possibility can be applied to the
real order or to the order of existence. Hence several marks that are relative to
existence are said to be logically compossible if affirming one of some real being
17 The word ‘act’ (to act, action) is taken in many ways. Primarily it signifies the term of motion as what is
complete or made fully to be. So it is extended to the being that perfects another (that is, form), whether
this perfecting is an operation (for example of thinking) or an action (for example walking) of the agent, or
is something received by the patient (for example shape in the marble). It is also applied to a being that is
simply existent (actual or simply existing being), or even to existence itself
Potency is conceived in general as capacity for act. So it is extended from the notion of ability
(active potency) to what can receive change (passive potency) or even to the producible form itself or to the
whole producible but not yet produced being (the possible, the potency for existing, objective potency). All
these significations agree in the fact that they are in some opposed to act. To these is added the potency that
is not necessarily opposed to act but to the impossible, namely logical possibility. In this sense potency, or
more accurately the possible, signifies what is not impossible, whether it actually exists or not.
51
does not involve denying the other of the same thing. Something that is possible in
this sense is opposed logically to the impossible.
The impossible can then be defined as something that cannot exist. A thing
can be incapable of existing on two grounds: either a) because its essential marks
are simply incompatible with each other, for example spherical cube, irrational man,
a non actually existing incausible thing; this impossibility is properly called logical
or intrinsic impossibility; or b) because it lacks in itself a reason for its existence and
no adequate cause exists in the universe that would be capable, whether mediately
or immediately, of producing it; this impossibility is called extrinsic or virtual
impossibility, but logical repugnance arises in this case if we consider the whole
order of existent things; for if something includes the mark of being from-another,
or of causability in its formal essence, it would be incompatible with existing unless
something that can cause it does actually exist; for what can be caused and what can
cause are correlatives.
The possible, on the other hand, can be defined as that to which existence is
not repugnant. So it is the same as the notion of being or of thing, and it includes
both actually existing things and things that do not actually exist but can exist. For
something to be possible in this sense, both extrinsic and intrinsic impossibility
must be excluded. Logical possibility in the broad sense therefore includes both
internal non-repugnance to existing (logical possibility properly speaking) and, if
the being is causable, virtual existence in its cause (virtual possibility).
On Obediential Potency
53
adequately from the respect to omnipotence that they state (see Scotus, Oxon. 1
d.43. A criticism of this opinion is found in Ockham, Sentences 1 d.43 q.2).
3. The opinion of William of Ockham, to whom is commonly but falsely
ascribed the doctrine of divine omnipotence as the ultimate source of intrinsic
possibility (see what I wrote elsewhere, op.cit. supra 70-96). It suffices here to note
that this opinion seems in fact to be that of Henry of Ghent and fiercely attacked by
Ockham. The true doctrine of Ockham seems to be substantially the same as the
original position of Thomas, for both, as true followers of Aristotle, treated the
question of the possibility of things in a logical rather than metaphysical way. The
metaphysical interpretation of the problem is found in Scotus and after him among
Thomists (op.cit. 91).
40. Act and potency divide being and every kind of being. This Scholastic
axiom must be understood of act and potency as disjunctive attributes of being,
where its truth is sufficiently plain. The sense is: everything of which the definition
of being holds (namely, what existence is not repugnant to) either actually exists or
does not actually exist. This disjunctive is valid not only of being as a transcendental
but also of categorical being, so that everything of which the definition of substance
or any of the accidents is true either actually exists or is in objective potency to
existing.
As to the axiom that act and potency are in the same genus, see what I wrote
elsewhere.18
41. Potency involves some imperfection if it is understood in the sense of
subjective or objective potency (potential being) or of passive or obediential
potency; but not if it is understood as the possible is opposed to the impossible. The
point is plain from the definitions of these potencies; for all these potencies adduced
before agree in that they express the capacity of receiving some real perfection, and
so that which is said to be in this sort of potency is in itself perfectible and hence in
some way imperfect. Actual being on the contrary does not involve imperfection.
The same must be said of the logically possible and of active potency.
42. Act and potency as constitutive principles involve imperfection insofar as
they are mutually perfectible in themselves; for only the imperfect is perfectible.
43. Potential being considered in itself is not simply real, that is, does not
really exist save virtually in its causes. But it differs conceptually from the absolutely
18 Transcendentals and their Function p.148: “Act and potency, as primary differences of being, are clearly
existential modes, and differ from act and potency as essential or constitutive elements of things. What
actually exists is called a being in act; what does not actually exist but can exist a being in potency. The
latter still verifies the notion of being, namely ‘that to which existence is not repugnant’… Since actual
existence does not enter into the formal notion of being as a quiddity, it cannot change the quiddity or kind
of being. Hence ‘act and potency are in the same genus’; and, as Scotus points out further, not only are the
actual being and its corresponding potential being in the same genus but they are numerically identical. In
other words the particular or individual object which is now said to be actual was, prior to its existence,
potential.”
56
nothing and from being of reason; for the idea of a possible quiddity involves the
relation of non-repugnance to existence, while the others do not.
44. Therefore that which is a potential being cannot have the reason for its
existence in itself but in its cause; so the potential is the causable.
45. If something is a potential being, something else is actual. The point is
plain thus: Potential being does not in fact exist; therefore if it can in fact exist some
being is required that can effect it; therefore (from conclusions 24 and 26)
something actually exists, namely at least the first in-effectible efficient cause.
46. If something is in subjective, passive, objective, or obediential potency it
is causable. The point is plain from the definitions, at least as concerns the real
perfection to which something is in potency.
47. Therefore if something is uncausable it is not in this sort of potency but is
pure act (from negation of the previous conclusion).
Article 1: On Substance
even if the parts have a reason in themselves for coming together (as the forces of
the mass, namely of gravitation), lack a reason for this precise system or this specific
union. Within a one per accidens we can distinguish an artificial one and a merely
accidental or casual one. An artificial one is a work of an artisan and does not arise
accidentally by chance. Such things are a house, a table, a vehicle etc. In an artificial
one the parts are per se indifferent as to union or non-union, for example wood,
iron, lead, copper, which are the matter from which the house is made; for the
reason of their unity is found in an extrinsic intelligent cause, namely in the artisan
himself. A merely casual one is understood as that which arises by chance, that is,
tangential to the intention of a rational cause, whether foreseen or not, as the delta
of a river etc.
b) ‘permanence as to essence’ because substance cannot be something
transient as to essence. We spoke above about the transient as to existence; the
transient as to essence, on the contrary, is present if the quiddity or essence of the
thing is a process or something flowing and becoming, for example time, a melody,
organic life, the action of solving a mathematical problem. The permanent, by
contrast, has its whole essence at once and not successively, as Peter, a tree, a table,
the human soul. Indeed a being is said to be permanent as to essence even if it is
continually changing accidentally, or if it only lasts for a moment; for it is enough
and required that the permanent, in the moment when it exists, has its whole
essence at once.
c) ‘relative independence and existence in itself’ because a dependent being
is that which requires some other being at the same time so as to be able to exist, as
we said above. An independent being, by contrast, does not require something else
at the same time so as to be able to exist. This independence can be absolute, namely
if what is said to be independent needs no other being whatever in order to exist, or
it can be relative, namely in relation to some specific being (for example, something
effective is relatively independent, namely as regard its effect, but the effect is
dependent on what is effective) or in respect of some specific mode of dependence.
In other words, relative independence does not exclude all dependence whatever in
any order, in which case relative independence involves only existence in itself,
namely the possibility of existing in itself such that it is not s mere modification of
some other being. Hence house, man, atom, molecule, earth are said to be relatively
independent. Shape, whiteness, position, location, configuration etc. are neither
relatively nor absolutely independent things, because they always require the
simultaneous existence of some subject that they modify. To such things belongs
being-in-another and not existence-in-itself. ‘Existence-in-itself’ here merely
signifies that a substance does not inhere in something else as a modification of such
something else. But substance can exist in another as a part of the whole, for such
‘existence-in-another’ would not exist as a modification of some other thing. Thus,
for example, does the soul exist in man or atoms in molecules, for the soul is a true
substance, whether it exists without a body or with a body; and one must say the
same of atoms. ‘Existence-in-itself’ therefore involves both relative independence
and permanence as to essence.
Definition of Substance
58
Substance can be defined as some real per se one thing to which belongs existence
in itself or relative independence and permanence as to essence. The classic
definition of Scholastics expresses almost the same, namely substance is a thing to
which belongs existence in itself and not in another as in a subject of inherence.
It is called: a) ‘a thing’, that is some real per se one thing. Thing here is
understood strictly, that is not as opposed to reality or formality in Scotus’ sense; for
both substance and accident belong to the order of things. In one and the same thing
we can, according to Scotus, distinguish several realities or perfections distinct on
the part of the thing. Principal among these is metaphysical essence, to which is
added hecceitas; but the rest are called properties, namely what flow from the
metaphysical essence; b) a thing ‘to which belongs (existence in itself etc.)’ rather
than ‘which is (existence in itself etc.)’, because existence is not necessarily of the
quiddity of any being unless the being is a being-from-itself. Only non-repugnance to
existence is of the essence of substance just as it is of the essence of being in general.
But we can say that if substance does exist, the mode of existence that properly
belongs to it would be existence-in-itself. This point is expressed by the term
‘belongs to’, or ‘corresponds to’, ‘agrees with’, ‘is suited to’ etc.; c) ‘existence in itself’,
or ‘in-itselfness’, which involves at least relative independence and permanence as
to essence; d) ‘not in another as in a subject of inherence’, that is, not in another as a
modification of it. For the subject that is modified is called ‘subject of inherence’
because the modification inheres in it.19
Substance as to its name (sub-stans or ‘standing under’) signifies precisely
that which stands under or is subject of other things. In this sense God cannot be
called a substance since no accident can exist in him. But the constitutive idea of
substance is not precisely a) ‘standing under’, that is, it does not consist in what
does stand under another. This idea does exclude all accidents but does not include
all substances, namely it does not include the substance that is both in-itself and
from-itself, or an altogether independent being. Nor is the constitutive idea of
substance precisely ‘permanence’, that is aptitude to persist under successive
changes. Accidents can also be permanent as to changes, for example habits etc.
Rather the essence of substance consists precisely in in-itselfness, for only this
notion includes every substance and excludes every accident.
19 The notion of substance does not exclude every way of being in another, but only the way of being in
another as a mere accidental modification. We can indeed distinguish several ways of being, for example
substantial form in prime matter or the soul in the body. Prime matter, according to hylomorphists, or body
si called the subject of formation; for the soul and material forms do not inhere in their subject as accidental
forms do, but are said to in-form the subject so that it becomes a new nature or substance. But according to
hylosystemism particular subatomic particles, insofar as they are united in some natural system, are the
subjects of substantial union. The notion of subject of inhesion, however, is restricted to that (namely
substance) which is modified accidentally, as the soul with respect to volition or intellection.
59
1. Complete substance, namely that which does not need another substance
so as to constitute a substantial whole along with it. For it has the sort of
completeness as to acting and existing that it can exist and does indeed exist in the
order of nature as a whole something. It is:
a) simply complete, if it not only does not need another substance in
order to be a substantial whole but also lacks the natural aptitude for
uniting with other substances in order to become a per se one, as man,
brute animal, plant, God, angel.
b) complete in a certain respect, if it is indeed a substantial whole in itself
but possesses a natural aptitude for uniting with other substances in
one natural or substantial system, as a positron, negatron, meson,
neutron etc.20 with respect to atoms, atoms with respect to the living
body, etc.
2. Incomplete substance, namely a substance that does in fact need another
substance in order to constitute along with it a substantial whole. Such a substance
needs another substance as constitutive part, not because it lacks in-itselfness as to
inherence but because it is in itself imperfect as a nature. It is incomplete in such a
way that it cannot be said to exist naturally without its substantial complement.
Such a substance is not partially a substance, as if it were partly substance and
partly accident, but is a part of a substance. It is:
a) simply incomplete, if it depends intrinsically on another substance as to
all its operations, as the soul of a brute, or prime matter and material
substantial forms according to hylomorphism.
b) incomplete in a certain respect, if it does not intrinsically depend on
another substance as to its total operation, as the rational soul
Whether such substances really exist in the real order, however, is to be
settled empirically. Likewise, what things are new substances and what merely a
one by aggregation and per accidens must be determined by the natural philosopher
after investigation of the scientific data.
20We can of course ask whether all these particles exist formally or merely virtually in the atomic nucleus,
for scientists themselves distinguish between nucleons (that is between protons and neutrons) which as
such seem to exist in the nucleus, and other particles which, as they say, are ‘created’ in nuclear changes
(namely positrons, negatrons, mesons). (On this matter see what I wrote elsewhere, ‘The Atomic Nucleus’,
Franciscan Studies XV 1955, 350-383.) A fortiori, therefore, natural philosophers can dispute about their
reality and relations with each other.
60
On Supposit
A supposit is defined as a substance singular, complete, in its own right. It is called:
a) substance, to exclude both every accident and every being of reason. b) Singular,
to exclude the way in which the common nature is in particulars, as human nature in
Peter, Paul. Only an individual can be a supposit. c) Complete, to exclude the way in
which a part is in a whole, so foot, hand, corpse, separate soul are not supposits.
Only a complete substance, namely one that does not need another substance to
constitute a substantial whole, is capable of perfectly subsisting. d) In its own right,
to exclude existing per se in another in any other way, namely by hypostatic union
or by union of substances that are complete in a certain respect. So single subatomic
particles cease to be supposits insofar as they are in fact united in atoms, and single
atoms insofar as they form a body etc. Likewise if a complete substance, as a stone,
an individual human nature, an angel were assumed by a divine person or nature,
the assumed substance would by that very fact cease to be a supposit. Note that
‘being in its own right’ does include, or at least presupposes, the other perfections,
namely singular and complete substantiality, and so ‘being in its own right’ is a
fundamental and perfection whereby a supposit (or person) becomes such. For a
thing is said to be in its own right if all actions or affections (passions) are attributed
to it. It is, metaphorically speaking, quasi-lord of its passions and actions.
On Person
A person is a substance singular, complete, in its own right, endowed with reason, or
more briefly a rational supposit. For person differs from a simple supposit in that it
is by nature rational or intellective. Men and angels are persons; plants, animals, or
inanimate things are merely supposits. So a person is more perfect than a simple
supposit in that a) it can know that it exists in it its own right, b) it exists in its own
right not only as to existence but also as to acting (because of its liberty), c) it is a
subject of rights and obligations.
this opinion to explain the substantial union of the Word with humanity, namely
how a per se one is found in Christ. For if the idea of person consists in mere
negation, human nature is as complete and perfect in substance when it is united
with the Word as it would be if it were not united. But between two substances
actually complete there can be no substantial union or a per se one. For the precise
reason that an incomplete substance (or a substance complete in a certain respect)
is capable of uniting substantially with other substances is founded in the fact that it
would be incomplete or that its substantial potencies would not be fully used up.
When, by contrast, such a substance is in fact united, these potencies are actualized,
the substance is perfected substantially (that is, in the order of substance), and a per
se one exists.
The response to this argument given by those who favor the second opinion
is as follows: the Hypostatic Union is called substantial in opposition to accidental
union. Nevertheless it is very different from any other per se union, for example
between prime matter and substantial form, between the body informed with
inferior forms and the rational soul, between the subatomic particles etc. For in all
these others the potency for uniting is found in the essence itself of the substances
to be compounded, and indeed in both members of the union. Further, a new
substance and nature results from the union. But in the Hypostatic Union there is no
fusion between the divine and human natures and no new substance or nature
arises.
In what, indeed, does the Hypostatic Union consist? It seems to consist in the
fact that the actions and passions are now to be attributed not to the human nature
itself but to the Divine Person as its lord. For the human nature ceases to have
dominion over its actions and ceases to exist as in its own right. On the contrary it
exist in another’s right, namely the Word’s. The question is asked whether anything
positive is taken away by the personed nature so as to be able to unite
hypostatically. It seems not. For any nature or substance at all, even one that is
complete and in its own right, is in obediential potency. This potency is of course
substantial and essential. It is a fundamental and radical incompleteness in the
order of subsistence and in-itselfness, and so suffices for explaining union per se on
the part of a created nature.
Indeed, not only is the hypothesis of a positive addition superfluous for
explaining union per se, but there is difficulty in seeing how a nature could come to
be in its own right and incommunicable through anything positive. For this
something positive makes the nature so incommunicable that not even God can
assume it unless this impediment is removed. For this positive something is
something created and, precisely qua created, it is totally dependent in its existence
on the lordship of the Creator. How then could it have a quasi-independence as to
this lordship by reason of its essence when this essence is formally and radically
dependent?
It is no help to say that personhood is not an absolute but a modal thing, that
is, a thing that does not add a proper new being-ness but merely modifies the being-
ness of its subject. For whatever should be said about the very flimsy being-ness of a
mode, it is not nothing and so has some existence, at least when it modifies a subject.
But this being-ness is also created and so totally dependent on and under the
64
lordship of the Creator in its existing. Whence then does it have the capacity of
conferring independence or the feature of being in its own right by reason of the
same essence?
Therefore it seems that it is not by anything positive, whether absolute or
modal, whether accidental or substantial, that a complete nature exists in its own
right. For a creature has quasi-dominion or the feature of existing in its own right
only insofar as God gives up something of his own right in favor of the creature. But
God cannot so abandon his right to any created entity so that this entity could be
formally and essentially incommunicable with a Divine Person or so that it could
render another nature incommunicable; and so every creature, even a complete one,
remains essentially, as to all its positive being-ness, in obediential potency to
assumption by another hypostasis or person. Hence the arguments that now follow
seem to be valid for any positive being-ness, whether absolute or modal.
First: any positive being-ness in human nature can be assumed by the Divine
Word, because it is in obediential potency to God; but it is metaphysically repugnant
to human personhood that it be assumable, for the same formal thing would exist
formally in its own right (as personhood) and yet not exist in its own right (as
assumed); therefore it cannot be something positive superadded to human nature.
Second: in a human nature let go by the Divine Word and not yet personed
(which is not repugnant if personhood be something positive) there would be a
complete substance actually incommunicable and not actually incommunicable,
existing in its own right and not in its own right; but the consequent is self-
conflicting, therefore the antecedent is too.
So the second opinion is perhaps more probable. It is enough for there to be
an intellectual nature that neither needs to be assumed nor is in fact assumed, for
through the very fact of the double negation there is a complete nature in its own
right and so a person. Beings are not to be multiplied beyond necessity.
To the second question, namely how personhood is distinguished from
complete nature itself, one should say the following: A real distinction must be
without doubt admitted, because separation is possible and in Christ is in fact the
case. Further, the supporters of the second opinion admit a real distinction, but it is
a less perfect real distinction, namely not between thing and thing but between
thing and its negation. Such a distinction, they say, is a negative real distinction.
ascribe these actions to itself as its own, because it itself is not its own but belongs
to the Son of God, who assumed it and united it to himself as his own. The Son of God
performs all these actions through his human nature. Elicitively, therefore, they
belong to the human nature, but attributively to the Son of God, that is, they belong
not to the human nature but to the Son of God.
Herefrom it seems to follow that all the human actions of Christ are
elicitively (intrinsically) finite, and under this aspect they have perhaps, as Scotus
says, only finite value; but attributively (extrinsically) they are infinite and have a
morally infinite value. For they are actions of the Son of God. The same must
perhaps be said of the merit of these actions.
Article 3: On Accident
Some Problems
66
From the notion of accident as elaborated by Scholastics there are indeed many
problems that arise, the chief of which concern the number, kinds, and reality of
accidents, and their possibility of existing independently of substance. So a few
things about them are here noted.
Others following St. Thomas deny that the last six categories are
relations as such.
Another question arises about the reality of real relation, namely
whether there is a real distinction between the relation itself and its
absolute foundation, on which see chapter 8 below. Quantity too gives some
difficulty, namely whether it is merely a mode or modal accident of
substance or not. For Scholastics, in order to explain how the sensible
species of the Eucharist can be sustained miraculously in the absence of the
substance of bread and wine, seem to have changed, and perhaps not a little,
the original Aristotelian opinion. But this question seems rather to belong to
theology than to philosophy.
B. More famous than useful seems to be the Aristotelian division of
quality, namely into four species. The first of these is habit or disposition,
the second potency and impotency, the third passion and passible quality,21
the fourth form and figure (Categories 8.8b25ff.)
21
To understand the mind of Scotus note that: a) All spiritual acts, namely intellection or volition, or also
sense acts as seeing, hearing, etc. belong to the first division of quality. For Scotus distinguished between
intellection or knowledge or idea themselves and the act of eliciting knowledge. The former are absolute
accidents belonging to quality; the latter is a true relation arising extrinsically and belonging to the category
of action. Besides these, there is between the intellect and its knowledge another relation arising
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intrinsically that belongs to the category of relation, namely causality, because the intellect is a cause of its
knowledge, and knowledge itself is an effect (at least partially) of the intellect. b) Powers or potencies, as
those of the soul, namely the intellect, the will etc., are, for Scotus, not truly things but only ‘realities’ or
formalities formally distinct among themselves and from the metaphysical essence of the soul. Therefore,
properly speaking, powers do not fall as such under the category of quality. c) As concerns action, a
distinction must be drawn between action as a category, or an action properly speaking, and an action done
or produced, which is a true quality. An example of the former is eliciting an act of the intellect; an
example of the latter is understanding itself or the concept as an offspring of the mind. The axiom ‘action is
in the acted-on thing’ is not valid for action as a category, because this is an extrinsic relation arising in the
agent with respect to the patient in which it actually causes its effect. The axiom is only valid of action as a
produced quality. This quality is the effect in the patient, if the action is transient; otherwise it is in the
agent, but in it not as the agent is agent but as it is patient and receptive of its own immanent action. On the
validity of the other doubtful principle, namely ‘nothing acts on itself’ or of this one ‘whatever is moved is
moved by another’, see Scotus Oxon. 1 d.3 q.7 n.27; 2 d.2 q.10; 2 d.25 q.un. nn.12-13.
68
Some Conclusions
48. If something accidental exists, something substantial exists. Proof: An
accident depends essentially on its substrate. This dependence is of the same order
as that which is found between formal cause and material cause. For substance is as
it were the matter of accidents. Hence for any accident that actually exists there is
required the simultaneous existence of another being, namely that in which the
accident is. If this other is not something substantial but on the contrary an accident,
then some third being is required. But there cannot be a regress to infinity, both
because there would be at the same time an infinite number and because
dependence in any essential order ends in some independent being in the same
order. Hence every effect demands an ultimate being that is not an effect; a thing in
matter requires eventually a being not in matter, namely prime matter. Likewise a
being in another or to which existing in another belongs, involves a being not in
another, or to which existing in itself belongs.
If you object that some accident, namely quantity, can exist in itself, that is,
supernaturally, the objection is not valid; for even in this case God, as first efficient
cause, would be making up for the natural, material, secondary causality of the
substance. And so, even on this supposition, at least one substance would exist,
namely God himself.
49. If there is anything, substance exists. If there is anything, it is either
accident or substance. But if it is accident, substance too exists (from conclusion 48).
Therefore in either case, if there is anything, there is substance.
50. Being is divided into substance and accident. The existence of accidents
must be proved from experience. And on this point one must note that, on the
evidence of experience, many things exist that are not only beings but beings in
another, as color, shape etc. It does not matter whether these are formally objective
or subjective, for in either case they are real modifications of something. One must
say the same about our internal acts, as thoughts, affections, volitions; for we
experience these beings as empirical modifications of the ‘ego’. — From the fact of
actual accident follows the fact of actual substance (from conclusion 48). Thus both
accident and substance exist; therefore being is divided into substance and accident.
About knowledge of the formal idea of accident one must note that ‘in
another’ or ‘in-anotherness’ is correlative, for it involves something in which it is.
But to perceive some relation, there is need of knowledge of the terms of the
relation in themselves. Our first knowledge of reality, therefore, seems to be
knowledge of things as absolute objects and not in their relation to other beings. But
when we say that accidents are immediately experienced as beings in another the
22
On this question, see Hickey p.410, whose thesis, “It is not repugnant that an accident, considered in its
general idea, may exist by divine power in the absence of its connatural subject,” can easily be proved. But
as this author well adds, “however, to determine what accidents in an individual can be thus separated and
preserved in their proper existence is rather difficult, and perhaps plainly impossible by the light of reason
alone.”
69
sense is: this knowledge is not by way of reasoning out but, from phenomenological
analysis of the givens of experience, we perceive through simple apprehension this
relation of ‘in-anotherness’. Shape, for instance, is not only perceived in itself and as
something absolute but also in its relation to extension and color, namely as the
limit of a colored expanse. But in other cases it seems we do not immediately
perceive the idea of ‘in-anotherness’, but rather we infer it by reasoning out. This
happens, for example, with quantity. No wonder then that some, as Descartes,
identified extension with material substance as such.
51. If something is altogether independent, it must be substance and not
accident. Hence the uncausable, for instance, is substance. This conclusion is
sufficiently clear from what was said above in proof of conclusion 48.
On Relation in General
Relation in general is the respect of one thing to another. Therefore it does not
consist in anything absolute or in existing for itself but in ‘existing to’ something.
Hence the essential idea of relation is called ‘to-otherness’.
So three elements are found in any relation: namely a subject (that which is
referred to another), a term (that to which the subject is referred), and a foundation
(the reason because of which the subject is referred to the term). In the relation of
likeness, for instance, between a white body A and a white body B, one, namely A, is
the subject; the other, namely B, is the term; and whiteness is the foundation. Such a
relation is expressed by the formula aRb, which signifies that a has relation R to b.
Since this relation of likeness is symmetrical, there is also the relation bRa.
According to Scotus and most moderns, the foundation of relation must be found in
the subject.
Divisions of Relations
1. Relation is divided into logical and real. Real relation is that which is said
to exist, in some way at least, independently of the mind. ‘In some way’ is added
because, according to most moderns, every relation, so far as it is a union or
connection between related terms, is created or produced in the knower himself.
For such a relation four things are required, namely that the subject, term, and
foundation be real (i.e. things or at least formalities), and in addition that between
subject and term there be a real distinction. Of this sort are the relations of
paternity, fraternity, likeness, etc. Nothing is said about whether relation adds some
positive being-ness over and above the being-ness of subject, term, and foundation.
This relation is called real because the intellect does not generate the subject, term,
or foundation, or the distinction between subject and term. — Logical relation, on
the contrary, depends rather on the consideration of the mind, for it is a relation
that lacks one or other of the four requisites of real relation. Such a relation is found
if one or both terms are beings of reason, for example the relation of likeness of the
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known object to the knower. For a thing does not acquire a new reality insofar as it
is known. Such a relation is found if both terms are really identical, or if the
foundation is not something real (a thing or at least a formality), as is true of the
relation between subject and predicate in a judgment, for example that Saturn is a
planet of the sun. For the subject and predicate are one and the same thing, but the
mind conceives them as two. It is also true of the relation between olive branches
and peace, for the foundation is a purely arbitrary connection.
2. Relation is divided into essential and accidental. Essential or
transcendental relation is that which exists between things by reason of their
natures. The foundation of the relation is not really distinct from the essence itself;
for example a creature is essentially from-another, and hence has a transcendental
relation of dependence on God; and likewise for transcendental relations of being, as
true and good. — Accidental or categorial relation is what does not belong to the
essence of the subject of which it is predicated or in which it inheres. For the subject
remains the same in essence whether it is present or not, whether the relation
changes or not, as the relation of equality etc. Accidental relation is subdivided into
relation arising intrinsically and relation arising extrinsically (Scotus, Oxon 3 d.1 q.1
n.15, Quodlibet q.11 n.13).
3. Intrinsically and extrinsically arising relation: A relation arising
intrinsically is one that necessarily follows the foundation, once the term and
subject are given. It is not intrinsically present in the sense of absolute necessity, but
when the term is posited to which it is a relation, it arises at once and indeed
necessarily from the foundation itself. For example, a tower is 20 feet high; the
foundation is quantity (height), but the relations of equality or inequality do not
necessarily arise unless other terms are posited. — A relation arise extrinsically is
one that does not necessarily follow the foundation but follows contingently without
addition of anything absolute in that in which it is, or in the term, for example where
or location; for when the terms (Socrates, a house) and the foundation (their
external quantity) are posited, Socrates’ being somewhere in the house does not
immediately follow. The like must be said of the remaining six categories.
4. Relation is divided into mutual and non-mutual. Mutual or symmetrical
relation is that which holds equally between the relata a and b so that if aRb then
also bRa, as the relation of likeness between two white things. Non-mutual or
asymmetric relation, on the contrary, is such that if aRb then not bRa, as if a is father
of b, b cannot be father of a. A special case of non-mutual relation holds, they say,
between the creature and God, for the creature really and truly depends on God but
God is not really referred to the creature by any real accident that newly comes to
him. So, for example, Scotus says: “Now every relation of creature to God is non-
mutual, but God is said to be in relation to the creature because the creature is in
relation to him” (Oxon. 1 d.3 q.5 n.4). This non-mutual relation is called non-equal by
St. Thomas, or mixed by more recent writers.
Other divisions are given by different authors, but these are enough for our
purpose.
The category that is called relation simply is nothing other than an intrinsically
arising categorial relation, namely one that, once given the foundation and the
related term, arises of necessity. This is also called intrinsic relation in contrast to
the last six categories that are relatives by extrinsic denomination.23
The foundation of the category of relation according to Aristotle (Metaphysics
5.15) is threefold. Hence there are three modes of relations, namely: 1) those that
are founded on quantity (namely on unity and number), as double to half, triple to
third part, or in general all relations of equality and inequality and of proportion; 2)
those that are founded on action and passion, or better, according to Scholastics, on
the power of acting and undergoing, of which sort are the relations of causality; 3)
those that are founded on measure and measurable, insofar as one relative is
disposed to the other after the manner of measure; for the knowable object is the
measure of our knowledge etc.
23
From the nature of the thing, intrinsic relation is not restricted only to accidental categories, for the
relations constitutive of the Divine Persons are of this sort. Given that there is in fact active and passive
generation, both paternity and filiation, relations constitutive of the Persons, necessarily follow.
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relation itself, when it does not add anything to the absolute entity, involves neither
imperfection nor a new perfection. On the contrary, if someone wants to distinguish
such a real relation from the subject itself that is related and to attribute to the
relation in itself some being-ness really other than the being-ness of the subject and
of the foundation (as those authors seem to do who think that categorial relation is
really distinct from the foundation), then indeed such a relation formally as such
involves imperfection, for it would depend in its existence on something really
other, namely on the subject, the term, and the foundation, as we will say below.
Some Conclusions
52. If there is relative being, absolute being must exist. For once the existence
of a purely relative being has been admitted, some other beings must exist, namely
subject, term, and foundation. But all these are as it were the matter of relation and
so are not formally the relation nor formally ‘existing-to’; therefore they are
absolute beings. But even on the other opinion, this proposition can in some way be
saved. For if relative being is formally a being of reason with a foundation in the
thing, something truly real and therefore absolute is required, namely the
foundation itself.
53. From the nature of relation it is plain that relation cannot be found nor be
known unless subject, term, and foundation are present and known respectively at
the same time. And in this sense can the Aristotelian-Scholastic dictum be
understood: ‘relatives are simultaneous in nature and in understanding’.
Some Conclusions
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54. Every composite depends on its parts as on a material cause; for the parts
are the principles of which the composite consists. Hence parts are the material
principle of a composite.
55. Every composite is an effect. This point follows from conclusion 21,
because a composite is something that is matter-ed (see the preceding conclusion).
56. Every composite is composed ultimately of simple elements. From
conclusion 16, we cannot proceed infinitely with respect to material causes
essentially ordered. Therefore we must reach some matter-ing that is not matter-ed,
that is, to a material cause that is not materially caused. But this non-matter-ed
material cause is nothing other than a part that is not composed in its turn of other
parts, which is the conclusion proposed.
57. An independent or uncausable being, because it is not an effect, is not
composite; therefore such a being is simple. This follows from conclusion 55.
58. If there is something composite, there is something simple. This follows
from conclusion 56 with respect to a first being in the order of material causality.
But from the existence of the composite we can also infer the existence of a first
being in the order of efficient causality. For if something is composite it is also an
effect (from conclusion 55), and dependent (from conclusion 28). Therefore some
ineffectible efficient cause is required (from conclusions 23 to 27). But every
ineffectible being is simple (from conclusion 57).
59. Every composite consists of act and potency. For parts have in their
formal concept the idea of mutual perfectibility, and so are in potency to the whole.
60. Hence composition is a mixed perfection. This follows from the preceding
conclusion and also from the fact that a composite is caused and dependent on
another; for being a dependent being involves some imperfection in the dependent
being. Simplicity, on the contrary, involves no such imperfection.
Some Conclusions
61. Every mixed perfection can be reduced to one or several pure perfections
that exist concretely in a limited degree. The reason is that the imperfection by
virtue of which some perfection is said to mixed is nothing other than the lack of
being-ness. Therefore in itself formally imperfection is something negative and not
positive; for it is the negation of some positive perfection. Therefore it always
involves something else, namely a positive being-ness of which there is a limitation.
This positive being-ness in its formal concept either includes imperfection and
hence is a mixed perfection, or does not include imperfection and hence is a pure
perfection. If it is a pure perfection the conclusion is gained. If it is mixed, the same
question will return: Is the positive perfection in which the imperfection of this
mixed perfection inheres a pure perfection or a mixed one? So either there would be
an infinite regress and so there would be no perfection, or a stand would be made in
some pure perfection, which is the conclusion intended. So, for example, reasoning,
which is formally a mixed perfection, can be reduced to understanding, which is a
75
pure perfection. Likewise, the extension of parts beyond parts can be reduced to
simples that have a definitive presence in space etc.
62. No pure perfection is incompatible with another pure perfection. This is
plain from the definition of pure perfection; for a pure perfection or a perfection
simply is that whose formal idea does not involve limitation or imperfection.
Therefore of itself such a perfection cannot limit the being-ness of the subject in
which it is, and so neither can it exclude from its subject other perfections simply.
63. Everything finite, therefore, is a caused being or a being from-another.
This follows from the two previous conclusions. For a being is finite because it is
constituted either from mixed perfections or from pure perfections finite in number
or degree. But from conclusion 61, all mixed perfections can be reduced to pure
perfections in finite degree. But, from its own definition, no pure perfection contains
in itself a reason for limiting itself intensively, nor does it have a reason for
excluding other pure perfections from the being in which this perfection is (from
conclusion 62). Therefore if a full and sufficient reason for the actual limitation of a
finite being cannot be found in the positive being-ness of the finite being itself, it
must be in some other being, namely in the cause that gives the finite being its
positive being-ness. In other words, no finite thing qua finite is from-itself, but
everything of this sort is from-another.
64. Conversely, no being that is altogether independent and uncausable can
be finite, either intensively or extensively.
65. If there is something finite, there is something infinite. I prove it as
follows: a finite being, because it is also a caused being, involves the existence of
another being, namely an uncaused being (from conclusion 23 and following). But
from conclusion 64, an uncaused being is both intensively and extensively infinite.
66. An infinite being actually exists. This follows from the fact that there
exists an uncausable being (conclusion 27) or a being from-itself (conclusion 33).
But it can be proved immediately as follows: There is or can be something. Such a
thing is either finite or infinite. But the finite involves another infinite being (from
conclusion 65). Therefore in either case, if something can be, an infinite being can
be. But if an infinite being can be it must be, both because it is uncausable and
because, if it lacked actual existence, it would not be infinite.
67. Being is divided into finite and infinite. The existence of finite being is
plain from experience. But it can be inferred from other things already proved, for
example from the fact that being is causable. For a caused being lacks the perfection
of from-itselfness. The existence of the infinite follows from conclusions 65 and 66.
All creatures are deficient and reduced to God himself, who is the beginning and
end of everything, below whom there is neither perfect rest nor perfect condition
(St. Bonaventure, Sentences 2 d.14 p.1 a.3 q.1 ad 3).
Let everyone say: Lord, I came from you are highest, I come to you who are highest,
and through you who are highest (id. In Hexaemeron 1.17).
Principal Argument
We have already proved the existence of at least one being that is absolutely
permanent (conclusion 7 of part two), immutable (conclusion 13), uncaused,
independent, unconditioned (conclusion 28), a being from-itself (conclusion 33),
necessarily existent (conclusion 35), pure act (conclusion 47), substantial
(conclusion 51), simple (conclusion 57), possessed of every pure perfection in the
highest degree and so simply infinite (conclusion 66). Now it is also necessary to
prove that only one such thing exists and that there is and can be no other in
addition to it. Such a being by definition we call God.
We can briefly recapitulate the essentials of the preceding proofs and
complete them in the following demonstration of the existence of one God.
Beginning from the necessary and evident proposition that ‘it is possible that
something exists’, we lay down three conclusions: first, that some being from-itself
actually exists; second, that such a being is infinitely perfect; third, that only a single
being infinitely perfect can exist.
Conclusion 2: Every being from-itself must have every pure perfection in the
highest degree and hence is both intensively and extensively perfect.
Every finite being is from-another, because no such thing has in its positive
being-ness any sufficient reason as to why it lacks any pure perfection and indeed in
the highest degree. Therefore the reason for its limitation must be found in
something else, namely in its cause. Conversely, no being from-itself can be finite
either intensively or extensively.
same genus also prohibits a plurality of infinitely perfect individuals, for if there
were two beings completely identical in positive being-ness, they would not be two
but one being. But if anything does differ from a completely perfect or infinite being,
it would be because it lacks some perfection that is found in the infinite being. Hence
there can be a plurality of beings precisely because all beings beside the infinite
being are finite. We can therefore prove this infinite nature to be of itself individual
and singular as follows:
Now it is an empty question to ask: what is the positive perfection whereby
the infinite differs from the finite and why it cannot be found in several individuals?
For as long as we have to form our distinct concepts by comparison with likenesses
in other things, so that such concepts, precisely as distinct, are universal or
composed of universal features (as, for example, an infinite being is composed
positively of the feature of being and negatively of the feature of the finite), we
cannot express the ultimate positive difference of a thing distinctly and in a positive
way, but only indirectly and in a negative way, for example when we say that one
individual must differ from another by something positive that the other lacks. So as
long as we conceive the individuating reason that is ultimate in the order of
singularity, properness, and unicity, it is in vain that through concepts universal,
improper, and common alone we seek for a response in some individuating reason
why this reason cannot multiply in many things. That this question is indeed vain
(“a meaningless question”) surely appears from consideration of this fact. Many
individuals exist and are known, as is positively clear from immediate and intuitive
experience. Hence individuals are really known in some way. Not indeed distinctly,24
as is plain from the notion of distinct knowledge (namely through definition or
common concepts), along with the fact at the same time that no individual is
perfectly known, because our perfect or distinct knowledge of any individual does
not point out or explain why it is precisely this and not something else. Hence the
strength of the argument of ours adduced above must not be judged by the difficulty
or rather impossibility of distinctly conceiving that by virtue of which an individual
is precisely this and not something else like it, but must rather be judged by the light
of this whole fundamental principle, namely that no individual is conceived in its
individuality perfectly and distinctly (that is, by common or universal notions).
Hence besides what it has in common with other things, one being differs from
another being by something positive such that one has what the other lacks.
24
See what we said above about the principle of individuation. If we are able to know distinctly what the
essential individuating difference is, we can distinguish, for example, two identical twin brothers, even if
they were miraculously in the same place such that they were alike not only as to essentials but also as to
all accidentals. Likewise, if the same individual, say Peter, were miraculously bilocated, we would certainly
know that Peter is one bilocated man and not identical twins. [Translator’s note: an odd remark by Wolter,
which might hold of Scotus’ hecceity but not of St. Thomas’ designated matter or of Ockham’s primacy of
individuals. There is presumably no essential difference in the last two cases, because there is then either
no difference in the designated matter or no real universal to be individuated. An individual is known by his
being as individual, and if an individual is in the same place etc. as another, everything about it is about
this individual and there is no other; and if an individual is bilocated his bilocation hides recognition of his
individuality unless made known, not by his being as one individual, but by his somehow indicating that in
this case, despite difference of location, he is one individual.]
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Some Corollaries
1. Whatever besides God actually exists or can exist is a) dependent on God
as on the first cause, and b) a finite or limited being. For these conclusions follow
from the unicity of a being altogether independent and infinitely perfect; for if
anything besides God were a being from-itself, it too would have to be infinitely
perfect. But there cannot be two infinite beings.
2. No being that we now experience can be God, because everything we
experience is transient, finite, etc., and so lacks the perfection that belongs to God.
3. Therefore the falsity of pantheism, whether material or idea, is manifestly
plain; for God cannot be the world as such, since the world is changeable, composite,
in potency, dependent etc. Nor can the world be part of God, for God, because of his
simplicity, excludes all such composition.
4. Likewise the absurdity of divine evolution is plain. For every system that
holds God to be in the process of evolution in the course of time must deny both the
simplicity and unchangeableness of God. Hence ‘emergent evolution’ and many
other like systems of modern thinkers are in error.
5. If all mixed perfections are reducible to a plurality of pure perfections
existing in limited degree, and if an infinite being possesses all pure perfections, the
consequent is that God in some way possesses every positive perfection that is
found or can be found in creatures, and indeed possesses it in unlimited degree.
Accordingly God seems to differ from creatures by something positive not possessed
by creatures. Creatures, by contrast, do not26 seem, in the ultimate analysis, to differ
from God by any positive perfection precisely but rather because they lack some
perfection that God has. This notion is also expressed in the theory of participation,
according to which creatures are finite or imperfect likenesses of God insofar as any
25
Such positive element that perfects an individual in its individuality would certainly be a perfection, but
not a mixed perfection because everything such can be reduced to a pure perfection in limited degree while
the infinity of such an individual would exclude all limitation in pure perfections.
26
Translator’s note: the ‘not’ is missing in the Latin text but its omission seems to be a typographical error
and not intended.
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Many other arguments for the existence of God have been worked out in the course
of time, among which the following come to mind: Aristotle’s argument from motion
(Physics 8.5), St. Augustine’s proof from truth (On Free Choice 2.12-15), the famous
argument of St. Anselm, the triple way of St. Bonaventure (Disputed Question on the
Mystery of the Trinity q.1 a.1), the five ways of St. Thomas, the very fine
demonstration of Scotus, Ockham’s proof from conservation (see Boehner, ‘Zu
Ockhams Beweis der Existenz Gottes', Franz. Stud. 32, 1950, 50ff), and the argument
of Peter Auriol (see Schmücker, ‘Propositio per se nota, Gottesbeweis und ihr
Verhältnis nach Petrus Aureoli, Franz. Forsch., Heft 8, Werl i., Westf., 1941). We
cannot, of course, deal with all of these in this little summary of metaphysics. About
the more famous of these proofs the following few remarks should be noted.
Criticism. This argument, which is also called ‘ontological’ and ‘a priori’, has
found favor with many Scholastics, among whom are Alexander of Hales, St.
Bonaventure, Matthew of Aquasparta, etc., and among moderns such as Descartes,
Leibniz, and Spinoza. Nevertheless it does not seem to be a valid argument, unless it
be proved that such a being, than which nothing greater can be conceived, is
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possible or capable of existing. Such a concept, like all others proper to God, is a
composite one. But whether something corresponds to this concept in the real order
needs also to be proved. That such a being is possible can easily be shown a
posteriori beginning from creatures as caused. But if the argument is thus
strengthened, it ceases to be a priori and a per se nota proposition.
2. The Argument from Motion. This Aristotelian argument is the first way of
St. Thomas, who argues as follows:
Now the first and more manifest way is the one taken from the side of motion. For it
is certain and clear to sense that some things are in motion in this world. But
everything that is moved is moved by another. For nothing is moved save as it is in
potency to that to which it is moved; but a thing moves according as it is in act. For
to move is nothing other than to lead something from potency to act; but nothing
can be reduced from potency to act save through some being that is in act; just as
the hot in act, as fire, makes the wood, which is hot in potency, to be hot in act, and
thus does it move and alter the wood. But it is not possible for the same thing to be
in potency and act at the same time in the same respect, but only diverse things can
be; for what is hot in act cannot be hot in potency at the same time, but it is cold in
potency. Therefore it is impossible that something be in the same respect and in the
same way both mover and moved, or be mover of itself. So everything that is moved
must be moved by another. If that, then, by which something is moved is itself
moved, it too must be moved by another, and that by another. But this process
cannot go on to infinity because thus there would be no first mover and
consequently nothing else would move either, because second movers do not move
save because they are moved by a first mover, just as a stick does not move save
because it is moved by the hand. Therefore it is necessary to come to some first
mover that is moved by nothing, and this all understand to be God (ST Ia q.2 a.3).
Criticism: This argument, reckoned by St. Thomas to be the first and more
manifest way, is commonly today, because of the criticism of Scotus, reckoned to be
the weakest of the five ways of the Angelic Doctor. About the argument the following
need to be noted: a) The principle ‘whatever is moved is moved by another’ is not a
per se nota proposition nor does it seem to be universally valid (Scotus, Oxon. 1 d.3
q.7, 2 d.2 q.10, 2 d.25 q.un, Questions on Metaphysics 9 q.14). b) The argument that is
founded on the impossibility of passing from potency to act save as by a being in act
does not seem to be valid, because an agent, insofar as an agent has an active power,
virtually contains its own action even before it actually acts. This is plain certainly
about the will and probably about the intellect and other principles of motion.
Insofar, then, as the argument is restricted precisely to the physical order, namely to
motion considered in the strict sense (neither creation nor conservation is strictly
speaking change), it only proves, as Cajetan admits, that there is a first mover but
not necessarily to a unique first mover nor, a fortiori, to a first being that ‘all
understand to be God’. But this argument, which is certainly a physical one
according to Aristotle and probably also according to Thomas, is called metaphysical
by many Thomists. If it is reduced to other arguments, as to the argument of
causality or of contingency, it can in some way be upheld.
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4. The Argument from Contingency. The argument is thus set out by St.
Thomas:
The third way is taken from the possible and necessary and is of this sort. For we
find in things some that are possibles for being and for not being, since some things
are found to be generated and corrupted, and consequently possible for being and
for not being. But it is impossible for all such things to exist for ever, because what
is possible for not being is at some time not. So if everything is possible for not
being, there was at some time nothing in fact. But if this is true, then even now
there would be nothing; for what is not does not begin to be save through
something that is; so if there was no being, it was impossible that anything would
come to be, and thus nothing would now exist, which is plainly false. Therefore not
all beings are possible beings, but there must be something necessary in things. But
everything necessary either has a cause of its necessity from somewhere else or
does not. But there cannot be an infinite regress in necessary things that have a
cause of their necessity, just as neither is this possible in efficient causes, as has
been proved. Therefore it is necessary to posit something that is per se necessary,
not having a cause of its necessity from elsewhere but being cause of necessity for
other things, which everyone says is God (ibid.).
Criticism: Among the five ways of St. Thomas this argument is the strongest
and certainly valid, though, as it is ordinarily formulated, it seems incomplete; for as
was said of the preceding proof, almost all the ancients admitted, either explicitly or
implicitly, a plurality of principles existing necessarily from themselves. However, if
it is taken in a universal sense the major premise is difficult to prove directly,
namely that the things of the world are not radically necessary. At most we can say
that whatever we experience is possible. But as is plain from our own earlier
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Criticism: This argument does perhaps prove a first being in the order of
perfection or eminence. But that such a being is unique or the cause of all other
beings needs to be proved. Hence Scotus in his own demonstration of the triple
primacy of God, namely the order of efficiency, of finality, and of eminence, has a
special proof that these three primacies must be found in one and the same nature.
But it seems that this argument could be otherwise and better formulated thus: it is
clear that there exist in things of the world diverse degrees of diverse pure
perfections. A sufficient reason for this limitation is not in the perfection itself but
from outside; therefore the limitation of pure perfections in things of the world is
from outside or from a being that narrows them down. A regress to infinity is
impossible; therefore a stand is made at an unlimited and infinite being.
Criticism: Although the notion of finality in the world was most vehemently
attacked in the past century as anthropomorphism by natural philosophers, today
an agreement about the existence of some finality in the nature of things is
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continually growing. But even with finality admitted, this argument does not
immediately prove God. The cause of order and finality in the world can be some
inferior being, as the Intelligence (see Avicenna etc.) or the world soul. Once the
existence of God has been proved as first cause of all other beings, the order and
finality in the world can be used to prove the intelligence or wisdom of God.
Nevertheless it does not per se prove the infinite wisdom of God, and presupposes
the refutation of idealism. This argument, like that from motion, is physical and not
metaphysical. But if it is considered scientifically one must say that it lacks
metaphysical certainly and enjoys at most physical certitude.
8. On the Argument of Duns Scotus (Oxon. 1 d.2 part 1; On the First Principle):
Form the proposition ‘something is able to be effected or effectible’, which is
immediately inferred from experience, Scotus proves a triple primacy of the first
being, namely: I. In the order of efficiency he demonstrates that 1) something able to
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By way of conclusion we can add on some things about the knowability of God in
general. Philosophers indeed have in the course of time proposed the following
questions: 1) Can God be known with certainty by the natural light of reason? 2)
How can we know the existence and nature of God? 3) What, in our mode of
conceiving, seems to be the essence of God? We will deal with these questions one
by one in this article
naturally perceptible by our intellect but arises from faith, or the religious sense, or
in some non-rational way (fideists, sentimentalists, etc.).
In brief it must be said that the falsity of all such opinions follows from what
was said above. For from our argument for the existence of God as an infinite and
unique being, which we reckon to be demonstrative and metaphysically certain, we
can says that God is in some way knowable to us by the light of natural reason
through the things that are made and that we experience of ourselves.
concede that we can prove it but once revelation has been given; 5) the way of
modernism. Under this name we understand any system holding on the hand the
impossibility of demonstrating or proving the existence of God by reason, and on the
other hand affirming that God can be known by some appetitive faculty or blind
instinct or emotional apprehension. This faculty is named differently by different
people, for example practical reason (Kant), religions sense (sentimentalists, as
Schleiermacher, Graty, etc.), common sense (Reid, Oswald, Dugald Stewart etc.),
principle of vital immanence or vital experience (modernism in the strict sense, as
Tyrrell and others). Look for what should be said about these opinions in
psychology or elsewhere.
are referred to the same word ‘health’ (On the Categories, PL 64, 166b). Around the
thirteenth century equivocation by design is called analogy and described as a sort
of mean between purely equivocal and purely univocal words. But three things must
be noted on this matter:
1. Analogous names are denominative names, and the idea that is predicated
analogically of several things is said in the ‘what sort’, or qualitatively, of at least one
of them. So, for example, both man and medicine are denominated healthy from the
same health that man has and that medicine causes. And the term ‘health’ is
predicated in the ‘what’, or quidditatively, only of the quality by which a man is
healthy. It is predicated in the ‘what sort’, or qualitatively, both of man and
medicine, namely ‘man is healthy’ and ‘medicine is healthy’. Likewise, the name
‘being’ is predicated analogously of the substance and accident insofar as it signifies
that only substance is a being simply and quidditatively, while accident is only a
being in a certain respect and denominatively, for it is not a being simply but ‘of a
being’.
2. By contrast, one and the same simple idea can be predicated in the ‘what’,
or quidditatively, of several things only univocally; for either it is predicated as the
whole essence, or as a determinable part of the essence and as something absolute
assertable of individuals per se and not merely insofar as they share an attribution
with each other.
3. Names that are predicated quidditatively and qualitatively do not have
altogether the same signification, for example ‘health’ and ‘healthy’, ‘being’ and ‘of a
being’, ‘existence’ and ‘possessing existence’. But their signification is not altogether
diverse. So they are called denominatives that are, as it were, between the equivocal
and the univocal. For where the signification of terms does not stay totally the same,
the names are simply equivocal, because such names cannot be used in a syllogism
without formal equivocation. And this holds for all analogous names insofar as they
are analogous. Hence it is not to be wondered at that St. Thomas said, “The
Philosopher (Aristotle) takes equivocals in a broad sense, insofar as they include the
analogous, for even being, which is said analogically, is sometimes said to be
predicated equivocally of diverse categories” (ST Ia q.13 a.10 ad 4)
When we speak of a concept that is predicated univocally, we say, with
Scotus, that that concept is univocal “which is one in such a way that its unity
suffices for contradiction, by affirming and denying it of the same thing. It suffices
too for a middle term in syllogisms, so that extremes united in a middle term that is
thus one are shown, without the fallacy of equivocation, to be united with each
other” (Oxon. 1 d.3 q.2 n.5).
Our assertion is clear from both experience and reason. For we experience
that nothing is called a true thing unless it is that to which existing is not repugnant,
or in other words that nothing is named a thing unless its own proper concept
contains the idea of being as the ultimate determinable idea to which that concept
could be reduced. But in this case we are predicating a simply simple idea, and
indeed predicating it quidditatively.
Our assertion is clear too from reason in respect of things whose existence
we prove by reasoning, for example God or the substantial soul whose existence is
proved from the (accidental) phenomena of experience. For we can demonstrate
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implicitly includes another idea actually in itself is indifferent to that included idea.
And if you say, for example, that infinite is implicitly included in potency but not in
act, I reply: potential inclusion does not impede univocity, otherwise a generic
concept cannot be predicated univocally of its species, for a genus implicitly
includes its species in potency. Hence Gredt O.S.B. well observes, “Things analogous
by analogy of proper proportion have a concept that is one in a certain respect,
imperfectly prescinded from its inferiors. For just as a concept univocal to its
inferiors perfectly leaves out the differences with a perfect precision, so an
analogous concept imperfectly leaves them out by confusing them together in some
idea proportionally one that it alone explains. Therefore a univocal concept only
contains potentially the differences of its inferiors, but an analogous concept
contains the differences implicitly and confusedly” (Elementa Philosophiae Arist.-
Thomisticae, Herder, 1937, I.133).
2. Now all analogical knowledge is relative knowledge, that is, it arises from
comparison of two objects already in some way known, and consists precisely in the
fact that a perfection perceived in one of the analogates is attributed to the other
analogate because of some likeness, proportionality, etc. (among other things), or
because one analogate is the cause or effect or sign of the perfection that the other
has. Hence all analogical knowledge presupposes some previous knowledge of the
analogates. If someone, therefore, wishes to say that no idea abstractable from the
things we experience can be predicated of God save analogically, such a person
should show how we know God. For, along with Scotus, we call that idea or that
concept univocal which is one in such a way that it suffices for creating a
contradiction if is affirmed and denied of the same thing, and that suffices for
avoiding equivocation if it is used as the middle term of a syllogism. Therefore either
God is totally unknown or some way of knowing God exists other than by way of the
things we experience. But in either case our thesis stands, namely that being can be
predicated univocally of things that can be naturally known by way of the things we
experience. Similarly, the same must be said of substance, which is known by
inference from the accidental things we experience (for Scotus’ opinion here see
Wolter, ‘Duns Scotus on the Nature of Man’s Knowledge of God’, Review of
Metaphysics 1 n.2, 1947).
First, there are the followers of Augustinian-Avicennism, who say that being,
thing, etc. are the first impressions of the intellect, received either from God himself
or from some intermediate and inferior subsisting intelligence (namely the agent
intellect). According to them, indeed, being is truly one idea and one concept, but
such concept is primarily and properly predicated of God alone and only secondarily
and improperly and by analogy of creatures. Now these authors concede that this
notion proper to God cannot really be derived from creatures, but there is required
some infusion of illumination or some action of God or a superior being, for example
angels or subsistent intelligences. This opinion seems to be that of Alexander of
Hales, Roger Marston, Bonaventure, Avicenna, etc.
Second, there are those who deny true unity to the concept of being. Thus, for
example, Henry of Ghent (d.1293) holds that we have two simply simple concepts,
one of which is proper to God and the other common to creatures, but because of
their very great likeness our intellect is unable to distinguish between them but is
deceived in believing that the two are one. And if it is asked whence comes this
notion or this concept that is proper to God and has nothing positive in common
with the notions of creatures, Henry replies as follows: “Just as the estimative power
of brutes by digging beneath perceived intentions knows non-perceived intentions,
as the harmful and beneficial, so the intellect digs under the species of creatures,
which only represents creatures, to come to know, through the alien species of
creatures, the things that are and are said of God” (cited by Scotus, Oxon. 1 d.2 q.1).
Third, what St. Thomas thinks on this matter cannot easily be determined, for
when speaking of the predicating of analogous names of God (ST Ia q.13) he
certainly admits that names analogically predicated do not possess a single
signification and idea. Therefore if being can only be predicated analogically of God
and creatures, a concept simply one cannot be had but rather a concept one in a
certain respect. On the other hand, in his disputed question On Truth 1 q.1, the
Angelic Doctor is said to affirm the unity of the concept of being (see, for example,
Cajetan, Response to Two Questions on the Concept of Being to Franciscus de
Ferraria). He who wants to determine the true opinion of the Angelic Doctor, let him
do so. But it is to be noted that St. Thomas denies the illuminationism of St.
Augustine and holds that everything that the intellect knows it abstracts from
sensible things. Hence whatever we know about God we know from creatures. If,
then, it is said that the Angelic Doctor admits a double idea of being, and indeed
simply simple ideas, one of which is proper to God and the other proper to
creatures, I ask whence comes the notion proper to God? If it is said that the Angelic
Doctor admits a true unity to the idea of being, I ask how the analogy of predication
can be saved if some univocity is not admitted. It seems to me that St. Thomas does
not perceive everything that follows from his negation of the theory of Augustine’s
illuminationism. This was the job of Scotus.
Fourth, Scotus clearly proves the impossibility of knowing God from
creatures if a common and therefore univocal concept of being is denied. So cogent
was his argumentation that even Thomists yielded much to him, especially about the
unity of the concept of being. Hence Cajetan, Suarez, John of St. Thomas admit that
being is an idea truly one and most simple. But how this doctrine about the unity of
the concept can be reconciled with their negation of all univocal predication, I do not
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know. For their distinctions do not seem to me to serve for the problem to be
explained, but the more they are multiplied the more do things seem to be confused
and obscured. Hence Gredt’s judgment seems right, “Therefore the doctrine of
Suarez is false when he teaches that one can save in analogies of attribution the fact
that the idea signified is not only intrinsically in the principal analogate but also in
the others, though in dependence on the first analogate” (op.cit.). So in no analogy
can we have one concept simply but we always have several concepts with only the
unity of connotation or unity in a certain respect, namely to the extent the ideas that
are said to be one have some proportionality between them.
Among recent thinkers, however, some affirm and some deny the true unity
of the concept of transcendental being. But let him understand their doctrine who
can. The following points nevertheless seem to me need to be held.
1. The true and simple unity of the concept of transcendental being is
sufficiently plain from experience. For a concept is predicated univocally of several
things by definition if it is said of them according to the same idea and signification.
But on the evidence of experience a common concept of being is thus predicated of
God and creatures, of substance and accident. For we say exactly the same thing and
mean the same thing when it is said ‘God is a being’ and ‘a creature is a being’ etc.
Even many Thomists admit that we advert to an order of dependence when we say,
‘God is a being’, ‘substance is a being’ etc.
And specifically against those who deny perfect prescinding from inferiors in
the concept of being, we urge the argument of Scotus. The notion of being that is
conceived as common to all things and predicable of them is a concept distinct from
the concept that expresses the idea of infinity, in-itselfness etc. For we can be certain
that God is a being, or light is a being, and be doubtful at the same time whether God
is infinite or finite, whether light is something accidental or substantial. But this
cannot happen if the common concept of being only imperfectly and inadequately
excluded these modes.
2. Since the only reason for denying the unity of the transcendental concept
arises from the doctrine of the analogy of predication, it must be well noted what
Suarez observes on the matter, “Everything we have said of the unity of the concept
of being seems far clearer and more certain than that being is analogous, and
therefore it is not right, for defending analogy, to deny the unity of the concept, but
if one of the two must be denied, analogy, which is uncertain, should be denied
rather than the unity of the concept, which seems to be demonstrated by sure
reasons” (Disp. Metaph. disp.2 n.34).
3. The onus of proving their own opinion belongs to those who affirm that
being is said only analogically and in no way univocally. For every analogy
(especially that of intrinsic attribution) either presupposes or implicitly contains
some univocal idea predicable of the analogates.
Although God is “an infinite and limitless ocean of substance” in which all pure
perfections are unitedly and most simply contained, some of these perfections,
according to our way of conceiving, are more essential, others existential, others
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includes infinite true and infinite good and every perfection simply under the idea
of infinite; second because the last conclusion proved by a demonstration-that is
existence of an infinite being, or infinite existence of some being, as is plain from 1
d.2 q.1. But those things are more perfect which are known from creatures last by a
demonstration-that, for, on account of their distance from creatures, they are most
difficult to prove from creatures (Oxon. 1 d.3 q.1 n.17).
The most perfect concept (namely the concept of all perfections simply at the
highest level), which Scotus is speaking of, seems to express what is commonly
called the physical essence of God. But a simpler and more perfect concept (because
it does not seem to be merely a description by accumulation of perfections) is that of
infinite being. This notion expresses essential or quidditative perfection rather than
existential perfection; but from-itselfness or necessary existence, like from-
anotherness or possible existence, express existential modes. Further, this notion of
infinite being satisfies perfectly the three requisites of metaphysical essence, namely
that: 1) It constitutes the thing in its specific order; but God is singular in his own
genus, and this unicity of God is founded and proved, according to our mode of
conceiving, only by the fact that it is infinite being (see the statements of Scotus,
Ockham, etc.). 2) It distinguishes the thing from everything else. Although God has
many perfections by which he can be distinguished from creatures, as, for example,
being from-itself, subsistent intellection, etc., the one that seems more distinctive
and more removed from creatures is the one known last by a demonstration-that
from creatures. But among all quidditative concepts of God the most difficult to
prove from creatures is infinite existence. (See how Ockham, after conceding
demonstration of the from-itselfness of God, blames the reasonings brought forward
by philosophers for the infinity of God.27) So do not wonder that the infinity of God
is proved, according to our way of proceeding, from his from-itselfness. For from
this does not follow that from-itselfness is more fundamental and essential, but only
that from-itselfness is instead a relative perfection and more easily capable of proof
from creatures. 3) It is as it were the root from which the rest of the perfections
flow. But, as Scotus well said, “of all the concepts conceivable by us, this one (of
infinite being) includes virtually more things,” namely “every perfection simply
under the idea of the infinite.” It is more difficult or impossible to prove immediately
from any other perfection, as the perfection of from-itselfness, all other attributes or
perfections, as unicity, intelligence, life etc.
All pure perfections belong indeed to God, and from these are investigated the
perfections that, according to our mode of conceiving, seem to constitute the
internal life of God, namely his intellection and love. (In the subsequent chapter we
will treat of divine operations concerning the world.)
27
I. Brady, ‘Comment on Dr. Wolter’s Paper’, Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical
Association 27 (1954): 127-130.
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also because God knows creatures before he produces them; for this both belongs to
the perfection of knowledge as well as to human artifice, and the order and finality
in the world demand that God is a knowing creator.
Conclusion 9: From the preceding conclusion other things follow, namely
that God knows in a way different from creatures; for creatures depend for their
knowing in some way on an existing object, but God does not.
2. Formally
Conclusion 10: God’s knowledge of everything is certain and infallible; it
cannot be deceived. This conclusion also is plain from the infinite perfection of
divine knowledge (conclusion 2).
3. In Relation to Essence
Conclusion 11: God’s knowledge is really the same as the divine essence.
Plain both from the physical simplicity of God and from the infinite perfection of the
divine essence, which is perfectible neither accidentally nor substantially
(conclusion 2).
Conclusion 12: God’s knowledge does not consist in many acts as knowledge
does in us. Plain from the preceding. Hence a multiplicity of known objects does not
destroy the simplicity of divine knowledge.
Conclusion 13: In God, therefore, intellect and intellection are not really
distinct. For divine knowledge is not caused by the intellect as by a principle really
distinct from its effect. This fact follows from the divine independence and
simplicity (conclusion 2 of this part, or conclusions 28 and 57 of the second part).
Conclusion 14: What God can know he does actually know. For God is pure
act (conclusion 47 of the second part); therefore he cannot have any knowledge in
potency and not yet in act.
Conclusion 15: God’s knowledge is unchangeable and eternal. This
conclusion follows from conclusion 14 or conclusion 11 just above. For if his essence
is unchangeable the knowledge really identical with it is unchangeable.
in which God knows other things, whether actual or possible, outside himself. They
find a special difficulty with respect to the divine knowledge of future contingents,
about which we can say a little below.
God’s knowledge is commonly divided, because of diversity of objects, into
knowledge of simple intelligence, knowledge of vision, and also, according to some,
into middle knowledge. a) The knowledge of simple intelligence is said to be that by
which God knows things as possibles. b) The knowledge of visions, by contrast, is
that by which God knows things as existing. c) Middle knowledge (which not all
admit as a distinct third member in this division) is that by which God knows
‘futurables’. Futurables are things that would be future if some contingent condition
were met. The futurable is divided into: i) the merely futurable, namely that which
would at some time be if some condition were met but which will never be because
the condition would never be met; and ii) the futurable and future, namely that
which will in fact be because the condition will be. You may find an example of the
former in Sacred Scripture (Matthew 11.21): “Woe to you, Corazain, woe to you
Bethsaida, because if the works that were done in you had been done in Tyre and
Sidon, they would have repented at once in dust and ashes.”
Theories about the Way in which God Knows the Future Free Acts of Creatures
There is a famous controversy between the Banesians and Monists about the way in
which God knows the future free acts of creatures. Although the opinion of Ockham
appears to me better, namely that the way in which God knows all future
contingents is impossible for any created intellect in this life to spell out, these few
notes are added here for historical purposes.
28
A distinction must be made between the doctrine of Thomas himself and that of Thomists, for according
to Aquinas God knows the future by reason of his eternity, for by virtue of his eternity God is present to
every moment of time, whether that moment is present, past, or future (ST Ia q.14 a.13). By contrast, Scotus
rather than Thomas was of the opinion that God knows creatures that are actual by decrees of his will. The
opinion of the Banesians is founded on this opinion of Scotus, to which they add the principle rejected by
Scotus that ‘whatever is moved is moved by another’.
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2. The Opinion of Molinists: The objective reason that future free acts of
creatures are knowable to the divine intellect is located by Molinists in the fact that
for them acts have a determinate truth founded on the second act itself.
Explanation: The holders of this doctrine are the Molinists, who follow Luis
de Molina (d. 1600). He started a very considerable controversy with the Thomists
when he expounded his doctrine in his book Agreement of Free Choice with Gifts of
Grace (1588). After Molina’s death the question was fiercely debated for almost four
years in the presence of the Pope and the Roman Congregations (1602-1606), but
without definite resolution.
The doctrine proposes the following theses:
a) The question turns on God’s knowability of future free actions, especially
conditioned ones.
b) These acts, when done or when in second act, have some truth, that is,
they are done or not done.
c) This truth of the acts is not the cause that specifies God’s knowledge but an
absolute condition for God to have knowledge of acts.
d) Acts, to the extent they are free, depend on the will as second cause, but
they also depend on God as first cause, in that God cooperates with the act by his
simultaneous and not preceding concurrence with it. Thus the whole act depends at
the same time on both the creature and God. About this simultaneous concurrence
one must note: i) that it is conferred on the acting faculty in the second act in time
although it is offered by God by his eternal faculty prepared, in first act, for acting; ii)
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that the concurrence is indifferent and so is to be specified by the creature, that is, it
is to be brought into effect by the creature.
e) So, from all these points, the process of divine knowledge and cooperation
as to free future acts, according to our way of conceiving, is construed thus: God first
sees by middle knowledge the truth of man’s free action when the action is placed in
certain circumstances; then from eternity he determines himself to offer his
concurrence with man’s free action; and then in time he bestows his concurrence
simultaneously with man freely acting.
Criticism: It is certain that human freedom is preserved on this opinion more
than on the Thomistic opinion. However God’s cooperation with man, as it is stated,
is too restricted. For it seems that God must await what a free man would be going
to do. The truth of a future action is considered as nothing other than the truth of a
possible action, since the action, when foreseen, seems only to exist as possible.
Perhaps this difficulty would be solved if God’s eternity were now understood better
by us.
What must one hold in practice? It is certain that God knows all free future
acts whether absolute or conditioned; otherwise he would not be infinitely knowing
and providential. It is equally certain that man is free in his act, but this freedom
does not exclude God’s concurrence in free acts without destruction of the freedom.
The rest is a mystery.29
It is rather difficult to prove the inner life of love in God if we hold that love belongs
to the will and that the will differs from every other agent in that it does not act by
way of nature but freely. Nevertheless the following points seem at least more
probable philosophically than their opposites, and to me indeed certain enough.
29
Translator’s note: The problem of God’s knowledge of future free acts needs to be considered along with
the relation of God’s knowledge to creation in general. This relation is real on the part of creation but not
real on the part of God. Whatever happens or can happen in creation makes no difference in God or in
God’s knowledge (he knows all actuals and possibles, whether the possibles ever become actual or not, for
every being, however it has being, receives its being from God and with the concurrence of God). So
whether this free action happens or some other, God remains the same. It hardly seems to matter then, from
the side of God’s own existence, what free action is done. He can leave such actions to be as freely
determined by created free agents as he wishes (he can ‘take risks’ as it were), and his own life and
knowledge are unaffected. He persists as pure act just as much afterwards as before. Thus viewed, the
question about his knowledge of free future acts seems unproblematic. But I speak under correction.
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than what is incompatible with it (namely not to love). The proof of the antecedent
here is: a distinction must be drawn between love of friendship (benevolence) and
love of concupiscence. The former is love of an object for its own sake, that is,
because of the object’s intrinsic perfection, and this love does not seem to involve
imperfection in the lover. Love of concupiscence is love of an object and not for the
object’s sake finally but because the object perfects the lover or is a good for the
lover. But this love does involve imperfection because the object is wanted precisely
because it perfects a lover that is in itself capable of perfection.
2) Blessedness seems to be a pure perfection, and therefore it belongs to God
in supreme degree. But love seems to be either the principal element in blessedness
or at any rate intimately connected with the blessedness of an intellectual being.
That blessedness is a pure perfection is clear from the notion of it; for blessedness is
nothing other than an intellectual being pleased that follows upon possession of
one’s proper perfection. But God knows himself as infinitely perfect; he seems,
therefore, to be blessed; therefore blessedness seems to be a pure perfection. That
this blessedness is not simply intellection, but includes an act of will or love, seems
to follow from the fact that there is in God some operation besides what is formally
called intellection, for God is formally willing, at least in respect of creatures. (See
the next chapter about the proof of free volition in God.) For if God freely creates
things outside himself and so has volition, it seems that he also has some act of
volition, namely love, toward himself.
3) God is the first cause of all love in us. Hence he has this perfection either
formally or virtually. If you concede that the love is better than not to love, God
cannot have love only virtually, because the more imperfect does not include the
more perfect virtually. Therefore God has love formally.
The divine attribute by force of which God is said to act externally is called active
power, or power simply. For it is a power of changing or producing another as it is
other. To the extent change or production formally occurs in the thing itself that
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undergoes it, namely in the being that is changed or produced, power does not in
this sense involve imperfection in the agent that changes or produces the other.
Corollaries
The following conclusions therefore follow by way of corollary:
Conclusion 20: If God contingently acts externally, all beings produced by
him as he is first cause are simply contingent. Plain from conclusion 37, part two.
Conclusion 21: Since all secondary causes are produced by God, they are
simply contingent both as to their existence and as to their operating. Therefore all
physical laws are simply and radically contingent.
Conclusion 22: God can therefore act miraculously; for the possibility of
miracles is plain from the preceding conclusion. A miracle, according to
philosophers, is understood as ‘a perceptible work, done by God, unaccustomed,
supernatural’.30 A treatment of God as the final cause of everything else outside
himself, and of God’s end in creating, I will give in natural philosophy. Look there.
By reason of its effect, the power of God externally is distinguished into creation,
conservation, concurrence, and providence.
On Creation
Creation is the production of something from nothing both as to itself and as to its
subject. It differs from formation, which is production from nothing as to itself but
not as to its subject.
Conclusion 23: The first external production of God must be creation. This
conclusion is against the philosophers who reckoned that God was only the former
30
The treatment of miracles belongs rather to cosmology or natural philosophy than to metaphysics. Look
for it there. Or see what I wrote elsewhere about the knowledge of miracles, Philosophical Studies in
Honor of Fr. Ignatius Smith OP, ed. Ryan, Westminster MD, Newman 1952, ch.12, pp.233ff.
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of the world but not its creator. The conclusion is proved from the fact that all
beings outside God are effects. Therefore if you say the matter from which God made
things was present beforehand I ask: what about the matter? It cannot exist from-
itself because it lacks the properties of a being from-itself (from conclusion 2 of this
part 3); therefore from another, and therefore ultimately from God (from corollary 1
of conclusion 3 of this part).
On Divine Conservation
Conservation, as it is here understood, is defined as the action by which a being
from-another remains in the existence it has received. It is double, namely: a)
Negative, or the action by which what can destroy the existence of the thing is
removed or impeded. Penicillin, for example, which destroys bacteria, conserves the
health of the body; b) Positive is the act that consists in the positive inflow by which
a thing is continually given existence. Hence it is a sort of continued creation.
Conclusion 24: All created things are positively conserved in existence by
God.
Whatever does not have in itself a reason for its existence positively
requires, if it remains in existence, a cause of its remaining in existence. But there
cannot be an infinite regress in conserving causes, because such causes need to exist
simultaneously; therefore the thing is conserved positively by God as first cause.
On Divine Concurrence
Concurrence in general is the cooperation of one cause with another for producing a
common effect. Divine concurrence is the operation whereby God’s inflow is present
in the actions of creatures.
God’s concurrence can be either natural or supernatural. That concurrence is
called natural that a created agent needs so as to be able to do the operations that
naturally belong to it. Supernatural, on the other hand, is the concurrence needed
for actions that exceed the powers of nature.
Concurrence is also divided into moral and physical. There is moral
concurrence if God acts as moral cause, namely by persuasion, etc. Physical
concurrence, by contrast, is if God’s concurrence is as an efficient cause simply.
Some philosophers, indeed, distinguish between mediate and immediate
concurrence. The former consists in the fact that God gives and conserves the
powers of an event in acting and also gives and conserves the effect produced
insofar as it has an absolute being-ness; the latter is when God assists the powers of
a creature in eliciting actions in some other way. Immediate concurrence is
explained differently by different people. The supports of the dictum ‘whatever is
moved is moved by another’ postulate a preceding physical concurrence by which a
cause is predetermined to acting. Others however require a concomitant
concurrence such that God accompanies the action of a creature in its coming to be,
and the action thus proceeds both from God as first cause and from the creature as
second cause.
Conclusion 25: God concurs with all the operations of creatures.
Proof: A creature is totally from-another both in existing and in operating;
therefore it requires a cause that conserves both its operative powers and the term
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or effect of its operation, which cause is ultimately God. But this is nothing other
than to admit at least a mediate concurrence.31
31
If the action in the category of action has any real being-ness distinct from the agent and the produced
term (supposing the action is transient, or passes over to something outside the agent), or distinct from the
action in the category of quality, namely intellection or volition (supposing the action is immanent, or stays
within the agent), then too God is required as conserving this being-ness. But this seems the same as to
admit what is commonly called immediate concurrence.
32
Translator’s note: Aristotle is generally supposed to have denied providence, but his discussion of
chance in Eudemian Ethics 8.2-3 seems to require some belief in providence.
33
Besides this general providence by which all things are ruled according to their proper nature, there is a
special and indeed supernatural providence by which God provides for all men according to their merits,
present or future and hidden from us but present to him; for his judgments are always just, though hidden,
such that sometimes adversity profits more than prosperity. This is God’s special providence for men,
which Scotus says cannot be naturally demonstrated.
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After having proved the existence of God, we can establish the universal
intelligibility and will-ability or lovability of things.
Definition
On the various ways in which ontological or metaphysical truth can be understood,
see what I wrote elsewhere (Transcendentals and their Function in the Metaphysics
of Duns Scotus, pp.111ff.; Scotus Questions on Metaphysics, 6 q.3 n.5). Omitting a
rather long discussion, we can define ontological truth thus: It is the property or
feature of a real being qua being whereby it is made intelligible; or, more briefly, it is
the intelligibility of a thing.
On Ontological Falsity
What then must be said of ontological falsity? If there were ontological falsity it
would consist in positive deformity between the being-ness of a thing and its
intelligibility. But ontological truth is really identical with the being-ness of things.
Hence is got supreme conformity and so ontological falsity cannot strictly speaking
be had. Therefore if beings seem to lack indelibility the defect is not on the part of
the thing but on the part of the knower.
As it is, things are said to be false insofar as they give occasion for false
judgment about them, namely because of too great a likeness to some other thing,
for example false gold, false silver etc. Now this falsity is not in the things but in
words and the judgment of the mind. For things themselves are not false; so false
gold is not ontologically false gold but polished brass or fool’s gold; false silver is
polished tin. Often too the artificial imitation of a true thing is called false, as false
teeth, false hair, false money.
Definition
Just as ontological truth states the relation of being to the cognitive faculty, so
goodness involves a relation to the appetitive faculty or the will. Just as the former
consists in the knowability of being, so the latter consists in being’s appetibility.
Hence it is defined as the property of being whereby it is made appetible or willable
or, more briefly, it is appetibility or willability.
On other interpretations of ontological goodness see what I wrote elsewhere
(Wolter, Transcendentals, p.199ff.)
On Evil
Since every being, insofar as it is being, is good, it is plain that evil cannot be
anything real or positive, nor can it exist in itself. For it is the lack of good in
something good. Insofar as it is opposed to the good for oneself it is lack of due
perfection, as blindness in a man or animal. Insofar as it is opposed to the good for
another it is the lack of relative appetibility, namely with respect to a certain
appetite, as unripe fruit, poisonous plants.
Evil cannot have a material or formal cause, namely constitutive principles. If
material cause is taken in the sense of the subject-in-which, good is this cause. Evil
cannot exist in itself but in some good. But can it have a final cause? Physical evil can
be intended as a means to some end and licitly so, provided the end is good or
indifferent or proportionate to the evil. Moral evil can be intended only illicitly and
only by a finite will. But no evil can be desired for its own sake or as an end save
under the appearance of good. For evil as such has no appetibility in itself or
because of itself. But every evil can be permitted, that is, not impeded either by God
or by man, given what needs to be given. Evil does have an efficient cause but only
indirectly, namely in the producing of some good when the production is, for some
reason, imperfect or defective whether on the part of the efficient cause or on the
part of the matter, or even when a good is badly done, for example blindness from
destruction of an eye.
Conclusion 30: Evil involves good, or evil exists in a good, for from what was
said evil is privation of good in something good.
Conclusion 31: Evil corrupts the good that it harms. Insofar as evil is a
privation of goodness in a good, it corrupts the good. And when evil is measured
according to the good of which it is the lack, the greater the good that is missed the
greater the corresponding evil. Hence the phrase: ‘corruptio optimi pessima’ or ‘the
best is worst when corrupted’.
On the Beautiful
According to some authors the beautiful should be numbered in some way among
the attributes convertible with being. But it seems to be a species of goodness.34
It is difficult however to define the beautiful. According to St. Thomas “those
things are called beautiful that please when seen” (ST Ia q.5 a.3). The objective
elements, they say, are integrity or perfection, due proportion or harmony, and
clarity.
Another definition: Beauty is perfection of being shining out clearly so far as
to be fit to delight intuition. ‘Perfection of being’, that is, the goodness of the thing.
The requirement is that the thing be whole and complete, normally formed,
perfectly ordered in itself (its parts). ‘Shining out clearly’ for this perfection should
be hidden but stand out and be prominent so that it can easily be perceived. Hence
the beautiful can also be defined as the resplendent perfection of a thing. ‘Delight’ is
the effect of beauty. It is a taking pleasure in the rational appetite: enjoyment and
rest of appetite in the good perceived or contemplated. ‘As far as it is fit to etc.’,
delight arises from contemplation alone of the object. Hence it differs altogether
from the delight that comes from real possession of a beautiful object or from
recovery of a beautiful object that was lost. A beautiful thing as such delights
whether it is possessed or not. What is required and sufficient is that it be perceived.
Delight from real possession of a beautiful object does not come from the beauty of
the object but from the utility that it confers on the possessor.
There is dispute as to whether the aesthetic faculty is the intellect or the will,
or both acting after the manner of a one. It is certain from the definition that beauty
regards both the cognitive and the appetitive faculty. For a) it regards the will
insofar as taking pleasure and delight are in this faculty. This appetite per se is the
will, which, namely, follows the intellect as it perceives the beauty of the object;
sometimes a like delight arises also in the sensitive appetite because of an overflow.
b) Beauty regards the knowing faculty whose intellective contemplation is required,
at least by way of condition. The intellect can perceive by itself the beauty of an
object; but it has the assistance of the senses in perceiving and contemplating the
beauty of a material thing.
34
Alexander of Hales, Summa 1 n.3, “the good is said in two ways, the noble and the useful… I call the
noble intelligible beauty.”