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The Rigorous Thomist

A Blog by Rob Koons

From First Cause to Pure Actuality

6/22/2021

2 Comments

 
I have argued that we can deduce that God is a being of pure actuality, without passive potentialities, from the fact that He is absolutely the First Cause. Joe Schmid has challenged me on this inference, rightly pointing out that the implication is not immediate. I will try here to make the connection more nearly evident.
 
To do so, I will have to introduce some technical machinery. First, I will need the concept of a logical moment. If agent A causes some effect E, then we can identify two logical moments, even if the action and the effect are temporally simultaneous. If agent A causes E, then agent A acts at one logical moment M1, and the effect is first in actuality at a posterior moment M2. The relation of priority/posteriority between logical moments is transitive and asymmetric. No logical moment is prior to itself, and no moment is prior to any moment that is prior to it.
 
We have proven that there are absolutely uncaused events. These events must belong to logical moments that are absolutely primal—i.e., logical moments that are posterior to no logical moments.
 
The second technical device that I need is the definition of a nature-constituted disjunction of properties. Let D be a (possibly infinite) disjunction of monadic properties. Then D is a nature-constituted disjunction for individual x if and only D is a minimal disjunction such that it is essential to x to have some property in D. That is, there is no disjunction D* whose disjuncts form a proper subset of the disjuncts of D and such that it is essential to x to have some property from D*.
 
Let’s say that an individual x has a full complement of properties at logical moment M just in case x has at M every property that is essential to x, and, for every nature-constituted disjunction  D of properties for x, x has a property from D at M.
 
Now I’m in a position to propose a basic principle about causality:
 
  • The Completeness of Agents (COA). Necessarily, if agent x acts at logical moment M to produce some effect y, then x has a full complement of properties at M.
 
The rationale for COA is this: in order to act at a logical moment, an agent must actually exist in that moment. But an agent cannot actually exist at a moment without possessing a full complement of properties at that moment. If it didn’t possess such a full complement, it would fall short of actuality and would thereby be disqualified from acting.
 
I need one further principle:
 
  • The Groundedness of Accidents (GA). Necessarily, if an individual x has property P as an intrinsic, natural property, then there is some nature-constituted disjunction D of x’s essence such that P is one of the disjuncts of D.
 
In order for a property to be an intrinsic and natural property of a thing, it must be determinate of some determinable property that is essential to that thing. A thing can’t just take on intrinsic properties willy-nilly. An intrinsic property must fulfill some essential role dictated by the thing’s nature. The requirements of a thing’s nature lay out the possibilities for a thing’s intrinsic character.
 
Let’s suppose that God is one of the agents acting at a primal moment. Suppose for contradiction that God has some intrinsic property P contingently. By GA, there must be some disjunction D such that D is a nature-constituted disjunction for God, and P is a disjunct of D. If D were a trivial disjunction (with only one disjunct), then P would be an essential property of God and so not contingent. So, D must be a non-trivial disjunction.
 
Let M be a primal moment at which God acts. By COA, we know that God possesses a full complement of properties, relative to the divine nature, at that primal moment M. So, God must possess some member of D at M. But every member of D is such that, if God possesses it at M, He must possess it contingently. Consequently, God must have some contingent intrinsic property at M. Call this property Q.
 
Now, either it is necessary that God possess Q at M, or it is contingent that He do so. Both are impossible.
 
If it is necessary that God possess Q at M, there must be some explanation of this necessity. A logical moment is not a thing in its own right, but simply a node in the causal network of the world. So, if it is necessary that God possess Q at M, this must be a result of God’s essence, and a result of God’s essence alone, since there are no prior facts to appeal to. But if God’s possessing Q is a result of God’s essence alone, then He must possess Q necessarily and not contingently.
 
There is a second reason for ruling out this first horn of the dilemma: a reason based on St. Thomas's First Way. Suppose that it is necessary for God to have Q at the primal moment M. Then, since Q is contingent, it must be possible for God to have some contrary property at some posterior logical moment. If so, this would mean that God is intrinsically changeable. But an intrinsically changeable being exists within time, not outside it. And a being that is inside time cannot be causally responsible for the propagation of time, as the Prime Mover must be.
 
If, alternatively, it is contingent that God possess Q at M, then this fact (by the PSR or principle of causality) must have a cause. But that is inconsistent with our assumption that M is a primal moment, and so no fact at M can have a cause.
 
Hence, God cannot possess any contingent intrinsic properties at any logical moment. He must be a being of pure actuality, with no passive potentiality.
 
There is a complication that is introduced by the fact of the Incarnation. The Second Person of the Trinity has two complete natures, one divine and one human. Hence, we must distinguish between the properties that God the Son has qua God and those He has qua man. Qua God, the Son cannot have any contingent intrinsic properties, for the reason given above. Qua man, the Son has many contingent intrinsic properties. In fact, having a human nature is one of those contingent properties that the Son has qua man. So, in this sense, and only in this sense, God can have contingent intrinsic properties, namely, by assuming a second nature.
2 Comments
ML
8/10/2021 06:40:36 am

Hi Dr. Koons,

Perhaps I'm missing something, but if a purely necessary being can cause contingent extrinsic properties, why can't it also cause contingent intrinsic properties? These properties wouldn't make the purely necessary being complete, since it has a full complement of properties in the first logical moment, but why can't it have "gratuitous" properties, so to speak?

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Rob Koons link
8/15/2021 12:02:07 pm

I have updated this argument in a later post: https://robkoons.net/the-rigorous-thomist/from-first-cause-to-pure-actuality-20

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    Rob Koons, a professor of philosophy, trained in the analytic tradition at Oxford and UCLA. Specializing in the further development of the Aristotle-Aquinas tradition in metaphysics and the philosophy of nature.

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