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| #Post#: 176-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Feser's Aristotelian Proof fails in demonstrating the existence | |
| of Pure Act | |
| By: Valtteri Date: July 2, 2020, 7:38 am | |
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| I have been scouring the internet for quite some time now | |
| searching for an answer to this objection. Looking at the | |
| archives of the old CT Forum the objection was brought up there | |
| as well, especially by RomanJoe, but never was a satisfactory | |
| answer given. The objection is this: from the premises of | |
| Feser's Aristotelian Proof (potentialities are actualized, an | |
| essentially ordered causal series must have a first member, a | |
| potency can be reduced to act only by something that is in act) | |
| we cannot deduce the existence of something that is purely | |
| actual, only the existence of an unactualized actualizer which | |
| exists in an underived way (nothing actualizes its existence). | |
| Whenever this objection is brought up, the answer is usually | |
| that if this unactualized actualizer were to have any potencies, | |
| it would be a composite, and a composite cannot exist in an | |
| underived way, so the unactualized actualizer has to be purely | |
| actual. Sometimes the answer given is that if the unactualized | |
| actualizer had a distinction between its essence and its | |
| existence, it would not exist in an underived way, so its | |
| essence and its existence have to be identical, and such a thing | |
| has to be purely actual. I would certainly agree with both of | |
| these assertions. However, the point is that from the given | |
| premises of Feser's Aristotelian Proof, we cannot arrive at that | |
| which is Pure Act. Thus the argument fails as a standalone | |
| argument for demonstrating the existence of God; to arrive at | |
| God, we have to appeal to further premises, premises that are | |
| not part of the actual argument. | |
| Am I mistaken? Can we actually arrive at the existence of Pure | |
| Act from the three premises of the argument? | |
| #Post#: 184-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Feser's Aristotelian Proof fails in demonstrating the existe | |
| nce of Pure Act | |
| By: Mackie Messer Date: July 4, 2020, 10:30 pm | |
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| You end up needing to argue for the actualization of existence, | |
| which is basically the existential proof in De ente et essentia | |
| expressed with a focus on the terminology of actualizing | |
| potencies. | |
| #Post#: 185-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Feser's Aristotelian Proof fails in demonstrating the existe | |
| nce of Pure Act | |
| By: RomanJoe Date: July 5, 2020, 1:25 am | |
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| Boy, I remember wracking my brain over that issue for | |
| awhile--it's good to see I've contributed something useful to | |
| the age old canons of the elder forum. I'll need to dust off | |
| Feser's book again and have a look into how he spells out the | |
| argument precisely. I've taken a hiatus from philosophy for the | |
| past several months and I'm starting to realize it wasn't a very | |
| good choice. I feel like my mind is goop. | |
| #Post#: 233-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Feser's Aristotelian Proof fails in demonstrating the existe | |
| nce of Pure Act | |
| By: ClassicalLiberal.Theist Date: August 30, 2020, 7:29 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I too have in my early days of learning, struggled with such an | |
| objection. I think this objection stems from a lack of | |
| understanding of the actul argument. When Feser lays out the | |
| argument, he starts off with the existence of change; however, | |
| such a rhetorical move is only made in order to establish or | |
| attempt to establish the metaphysical principles act and | |
| potency. But it is not from this which he derives something that | |
| is pure act. It is the sustanence of potencys in act rather than | |
| the temporal actualization of a potency itself. For example, it | |
| is the refrigerators ability to continually actualize waters | |
| potential to be ice, rather than its ability to actualize what | |
| was once water into ice. | |
| Now having understood this, that it is the continued | |
| actualization of potentialities rather than temporal ones, the | |
| obejction fails. If, for example, we arrive at the existence of | |
| the ontologically absolute (Which is in fact what the argument | |
| arrives at), then your objection could be stated: but why must | |
| this thing be immaterial, divinely simple, and the like? It | |
| could just as well be composed of parts but have no | |
| potentialities to actualize. But this is mistaken. Continually | |
| actualized potentialities exist in the composed, which is what | |
| the argument is seeking to eleminate; the composed wholes | |
| potentility to be whole is itself continually actualized by each | |
| part, and is therefore not really pure act; there must be | |
| something even lower, so to speak, which holds this in | |
| existence. If one follows the logic, you will arrive at | |
| something which is pure act. Not something which just has no | |
| capacity to not exist, but something which has no capacity to | |
| not exist and whos capacity is kept in existence in terms of | |
| "itself", rather than something else. Your argument would leave | |
| you with something logically necessary and of derivative | |
| existence, but the argument actually leads you to something | |
| deeper: something logically necessary and something which is of | |
| underived existence; something truly pure act. | |
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