If being precedes essence then becoming must be non-cognitive in some sense, perhaps as valuation a claim on being? — Cavacava
I think what causes an issue is the 'mutual exclusivity' of essences. if something has the essence of 'human' it can't have any other sort of essence. The issue is that the same object can be seen to have different essences. An object that's seen as a 'tree stub' is a 'barrier' in a war zone; an object seen as a 'knife' is a 'screwdriver' when there's no screwdriver in the house; an object seen as a 'mug' is a 'cereal bowl' when all the other cereal bowls are in the dishwasher. So, essence seems context-specific and dependent on the kinds of activities/functions one takes the object as capable of performing. So essence doesn't seem to be intrinsic to the physical structure 'housing' the essence. -If that makes sense.I want to find a reasonable critique of Sartre's: ''Existence precedes essence.''
Why is the statement wrong? And could it be proven wrong without using religion?
I disagree with that however. First off I disagree with saying that what the object is has anything to do with "essence." You could, however, be saying that you're just defining "essence" as "what an object is," without any of the other typical associations that "essence" has, and that would be fine, but in that case, saying that what an object is must precede the object's existence makes no sense. The object can't be whatever it is prior to it being something (existing) in the first place. — Terrapin Station
This seems to me like it's probably buying that substances separate from properties can make sense (which is something I disagree with). — Terrapin Station
I am not saying that the object exists as what it is, prior to its own existence, I am saying that its essence exists prior to its existence. So the argument is that the something which the object will be, and this is its form or essence, must be prior to the thing itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
But we can ditch the determinism when we give reality to this form or essence which must precede the object — Metaphysician Undercover
I think that what is the case here, is that you disagree with the idea of separate forms. — Metaphysician Undercover
First, that's just a claim--it's not really an argument. — Terrapin Station
If essence is "what an object is," then it's contradictory to say that "what an object is" obtains prior to the object existing. — Terrapin Station
An object can't be something prior to that object coming to be. That would be the case just as well under strong determininsm. — Terrapin Station
"What object x is prior to object x existing" is simply incoherent nonsense. — Terrapin Station
What would be the motivation for positing additional subsistents (or whatever you want to call them), one per particular, that existents then fulfill by existing? In other words, why in the world would anyone believe that? — Terrapin Station
That's right, an object can't be anything prior to coming to be. That's not what we're discussing. What we're discussing is the essence of that object. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since we know that the essence of the object is separable through abstraction, there is nothing inconsistent, nonsensical, or incoherent, about the proposition that the essence of the object has existence separate from the object prior to the object's existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
If there's an object with an essence, than the object is something (an object with an essence). — Terrapin Station
I still suggest that using the term "existence" in these two different senses is counterproductive. I would say, instead, that the essence of the object has being separate from the object prior to the object's existence--i.e., esse in futuro. This also avoids the objection that the essence of the object must itself be an (existing) object; the mode of its (real) being is not actual, it is potential. — aletheist
Yes, all objects have an essence. That's what makes any particular object intelligible to us, its essence. And each particular object has a particular essence, which makes it the particular object which it is. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, now do you see the point? An object is always an object with an essence, so the essence is separable from the object. Now go back to the argument, where you originally engaged me, to see why it is necessary to conclude that the object's essence exists prior to the object itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is an essence? — Banno
Where's the contradiction? — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you, or do you not agree that the essence of the object is something other than the object itself? — Metaphysician Undercover
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