Being itself clearly could not be said to not exist, so if God is being itself, then he ipso facto exists. — Thorongil
I know Wayfarer has tried argue that existence and being are not the same thing, but even if one grants a distinction between them, my criticism still stands. Being itself clearly could not be said to not exist, so if God is being itself, then he ipso facto exists. Once again, the burden of proving his existence evaporates. Another way of phrasing my criticism is to say that the classical theist's conception of God is unfalsifiable. Of course, unfalsifiable beliefs are not necessarily false, but there's also no reason to accept them either. — Thorongil
Words move and have their being (and meaning) within the context they are used. A chair is a being, and it exists because it is found within Being. But Being itself isn't found within Being. Rather, it is Being. Thus, in what sense can the Being of beings exist? The beings exist, surely, but to say their Being also exists in the same sense that the beings exist would be a category error. But this sense of existence - the one in which beings exist - is the only sense of existence that we have. Thus when we talk of God existing we talk merely analogically (and flawed) - as I have told you, we don't know what we mean and what we say when we say God exists. We are like the blind man who says the sky is blue - he is right, but doesn't really know what he's saying. We don't really know what we're saying, it's part of the finitude of being human. And there we go - there's a reason I call Wittgenstein the greatest philosopher :PBeing itself clearly could not be said to not exist, so if God is being itself, then he ipso facto exists. — Thorongil
Yes but that distinction isn't necessary to see the distinction I was making above. Subjects of experience are transcendental to the objects of experience - and thus we can intuit the Being of beings, while chairs can't.I see a fundamental distinction between objects and beings; because beings are subjects of experience whereas chairs (etc) are not. Which is why in classical theology material things are more 'distant' from the source of being than are beings. — Wayfarer
I see a fundamental distinction between objects and beings; because beings are subjects of experience whereas chairs (etc) are not. Which is why in classical theology material things are more 'distant' from the source of being than are beings. — Wayfarer
Thus both subjects and objects are beings. — jamalrob
'are there any beings in that building?' — Wayfarer
The second mode of being and non-being is seen in the ‘orders and differences of created natures’ (I.444a), whereby, if one level of nature is said to be, those orders above or below it are said not to be:
For an affirmation concerning the lower (order) is a negation concerning the higher, and so too a negation concerning the lower (order) is an affirmation concerning the higher. (Periphyseon, I.444a)
According to this mode, the affirmation of man is the negation of angel and vice versa. This mode illustrates Eriugena's original way of dissolving the traditional Neoplatonic hierarchy of being into a dialectic of affirmation and negation: to assert one level is to deny the others. In other words, a particular level may be affirmed to be real by those on a lower or on the same level, but the one above it is thought not to be real in the same way. If humans are thought to exist in a certain way, then angels do not exist in that way.
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The fourth mode (I.445b-c) offers a roughly Platonic criterion for being: those things contemplated by the intellect alone (ea solummodo quae solo comprehenduntur intellectu) may be considered to be, whereas things caught up in generation and corruption, viz. matter, place and time, do not truly exist.
Univocity of being is the idea that words describing the properties of God mean the same thing as when they apply to people or things, even if God is vastly different in kind.
The doctrine of the univocity of being implies the denial of any real distinction between essence and existence. Aquinas had argued that in all finite being (i.e. all except God) the essence of a thing is distinct from its existence. Scotus rejected the distinction. Scotus argued that we cannot conceive of what it is to be something, without conceiving it as existing. We should not make any distinction between whether a thing exists (si est) and what it is (quid est), for we never know whether something exists, unless we have some concept of what we know to exist.[24] — Wiki on Duns Scotus
But what I'm working on is retracing the thread back to the point where materialism became dominant. — Wayfarer
Perhaps - but what does this distinction have to do with the point that I was making, or really the point of this thread? Thorongil understood what I meant by being. I didn't mean what is in common language understood by being, but rather what is, as Jamalrob put it, philosophically meant by it (and Thorongil got this - in fact, your distinction did nothing to help or prevent his understanding - it was simply irrelevant). Yes your distinction is a valid one. So? It has nothing to do with either the point I was trying to convey to Thorongil or the subject of this thread.Think about what in ordinary speech are called 'beings'. (It's quite a small list). — Wayfarer
That is why I always start with the question of the sense in which abstract entities exist. — Wayfarer
A chair is a being, and it exists because it is found within Being. — Agustino
Not 'my usage'. — Wayfarer
You're writing a blog on SETI. Would you say 'SETI has found evidence of billions and billions of beings?' — Wayfarer
Have a read of the SEP entry the Periphyseon by John Scotus Eireugena. — Wayfarer
being refers to any existing thingWhat is the semantic difference you're denoting via a capital versus a lower-case "b" there? — Terrapin Station
The reader understands from the context.And just as a note of trivial curiosity, what do you do when you want to begin a sentence with whatever the lower-case "being" denotes? — Terrapin Station
being refers to any existing thing
Being refers to the existence of the thing. — Agustino
Pantheism is the belief that all of reality is identical with divinity, How does "Deus sit ipsum esse subsistens." separate or differentiate itself from such a claim or does it? — Cavacava
As of now I will say that contemporary theistic personalists see classical theistic conceptions of God as incorrect, usually based upon Scriptures, although there are some theological arguments brought up. — darthbarracuda
Is the totality of being the totality of beings, or something else besides? — John
Is the being of anything something separate from, or additional to, the thing? — John
Is there any being where there isn't a being? — John
Is being an idea, a quality, an entity or...what? — John
Being itself cannot be said to be, because otherwise it would be a being . Similarly existence cannot be said to exist, because if it did it would be an existence or an existent. — John
I would maybe reference Tillich's concept of God as the "ground of being", or "God above God" — Noble Dust
But Being itself isn't found within Being. Rather, it is Being. — Agustino
we don't know what we mean and what we say when we say God exists — Agustino
For example, what does it have to do with anything said of God in the Bible? Being/existence itself, overall, that is, isn't sentient, it doesn't react to things, etc. That's limited to particular entities that exist. — Terrapin Station
Its a wonderful and rich history, much of it trying to respond in different ways to the ways in which God can relate to Creation without simply dissolving Him into it. Basically, while the identity of God and Being does 'solve' certain theological problems, it tends to actually open up a whole host of new ones. — StreetlightX
You can do a thing of making God/Being the reservoir of potentiality and sustainer of relations(so the source of novelty, free will/desire & order) and then 'creation' is simply the actual, or existent - bodies in space. — csalisbury
You mean like in an Aristotelian sense? That would certainly reverse what people like Aquinas say, which is that God is pure actuality, not potentiality.
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