The Act of Being: Why Aquinas Divided Essence from Existence
https://arc-codex.com/article/ac2193681e32a40c60f04377f11cd6a6
In the long and quarrelsome history of metaphysics, few distinctions have proven as consequential as the one advanced by Thomas Aquinas between essence and existence. To modern readers, the distinction can initially appear scholastic in the pejorative sense: an exercise in verbal hair-splitting conducted beneath cathedral vaults by men who had too much time and too little sunlight. Yet Aquinas believed the matter was nothing less than the central philosophical question. Why does anything exist at all? And what precisely is the difference between what a thing is and that it is?
His answer became one of the defining achievements of medieval philosophy and shaped the subsequent development of theology, metaphysics, political theory, and even modern debates over realism and nominalism. Without understanding why Aquinas insisted upon a real distinction between essence and existence, one cannot fully understand the architecture of Western intellectual history.
Essence Is Not Existence
Aquinas inherited from Aristotle the language of essence: the “whatness” of a thing, that by which a thing is intelligible as the kind of thing it is. The essence of a triangle is not any particular triangle drawn on paper but triangularity itself: a three-sided plane figure. Likewise, the essence of a horse is horseness, the intelligible structure that makes horses horses.
But Aquinas believed Aristotle had not gone far enough.
One may understand perfectly well what a phoenix is without knowing whether phoenixes exist. One may define a unicorn without ever encountering one. Essence therefore does not guarantee existence. The concept of a thing and the actuality of a thing are separable. In every finite being, Aquinas argued, essence and existence are distinct principles.
This was not merely a conceptual distinction but a real one.
To say that existence is merely part of a definition would collapse reality into thought. Aquinas resisted this fiercely. The world is not constituted simply because it can be conceived. A hundred imagined coins do not enrich a poor man. Reality possesses an obstinate surplus over intellect.
Existence, therefore, is not just another property among properties. It is the act by which essence becomes actual.
Aquinas called this actus essendi — the act of being.
The Metaphysical Revolution
The implications were enormous.
For many ancient philosophers, being was treated almost statically. Substances possessed form; form determined intelligibility. Aquinas shifted attention from static structure to existential act. Existence became metaphysically primary.
This transformed ontology itself. Finite beings no longer possessed existence inherently. Rather, they participated in existence. Their being was received, contingent, dependent.
A tree does not explain why there is existence rather than nonexistence. Neither does a planet, an emperor, or an angel. Each thing has an essence that limits and receives existence, but none is existence itself.
Only God, Aquinas argued, is exempt from this composition.
In God alone, essence and existence are identical. God is not a being among beings but ipsum esse subsistens — subsistent being itself. Whereas creatures have existence, God is existence.
This was one reason Aquinas believed the divine name given in Exodus — “I AM THAT I AM” — possessed profound metaphysical significance. God is pure actuality without admixture of potentiality, limitation, or dependence.
Everything else exists by participation.
Against Necessary Worlds
Here Aquinas diverged not only from Aristotle but also from certain Islamic philosophers, particularly Avicenna. Avicenna had already distinguished essence from existence, but Aquinas radicalized the distinction within a thoroughly Christian doctrine of creation.
For Aquinas, creatures are contingent through and through. Their existence is not logically necessary. The universe itself could have failed to exist.
This notion now sounds familiar because modernity inherited it. But in antiquity the idea was astonishing. Greek philosophy often regarded the cosmos as eternal or metaphysically unavoidable. Aquinas instead envisioned a universe suspended continuously upon divine causation.
Creation was not merely a distant event in the past. It was an ongoing donation of existence.
The world persists because existence is continually imparted to it.
Realism, Nominalism, and the Fate of Universals
The distinction between essence and existence also intersects indirectly with the medieval controversy between realism and nominalism.
The medieval realists maintained that universals — humanity, justice, triangularity — possess some genuine ontological status. The nominalists argued that universals are merely names imposed upon collections of particulars.
Aquinas occupied a subtle middle ground often called moderate realism.
Essences are real, but they do not float independently in a Platonic heaven. They exist concretely in particulars and abstractly in intellects. Human nature is real, but there is no separately existing “Humanity” wandering somewhere beyond the stars.
Yet Aquinas’s existential metaphysics complicated the entire dispute. Because existence actualizes essence, no universal exists apart from instantiated being except in the divine intellect. Reality is not composed merely of abstract forms but of concretely existing substances.
This had profound theological and political consequences.
If human nature is real, then ethics cannot simply be reduced to arbitrary convention. Natural law becomes intelligible because human beings possess a shared essence ordered toward certain ends. Justice is not merely whatever a sovereign declares.
One can already glimpse why later nominalism would destabilize medieval intellectual unity. If universals are only linguistic conveniences, then morality, law, and even reason itself risk becoming radically voluntaristic. In some interpretations, the path from late nominalism to modern subjectivism runs directly through this fracture.
The Existential Character of Thomism
Ironically, Aquinas is often caricatured as coldly rationalistic when his philosophy is intensely existential in the deepest sense of the word.
Long before modern existentialists, Aquinas recognized that existence itself is the primary mystery. Not merely consciousness, not psychology, not language — but being.
Why is there something rather than nothing?
For Aquinas, finite things stand perpetually on the edge of nonbeing. Their existence is borrowed. This grants the world a kind of metaphysical fragility and wonder often absent from mechanistic modern thought.
The created order becomes luminous precisely because it did not have to exist.
Modern philosophy would gradually abandon this framework. René Descartes shifted attention toward epistemology; Immanuel Kant questioned whether existence could function as a predicate at all; later nominalist and empiricist traditions dissolved many classical metaphysical categories entirely.
Yet the Thomistic distinction never disappeared. It resurfaced powerfully in the twentieth century through thinkers such as Étienne Gilson and Jacques Maritain, who argued that Aquinas had discovered an “existential metaphysics” largely forgotten by modernity.
Indeed, one could argue that the central crisis of modern thought stems partly from forgetting the distinction Aquinas insisted upon. When existence becomes flattened into mechanism, utility, or linguistic construction, the world ceases to appear as gift and begins to appear merely as inventory.
The Lasting Implication
Aquinas’s distinction between essence and existence was never an isolated scholastic puzzle. It was an attempt to preserve both intelligibility and contingency simultaneously.
Things possess real natures, yet they need not exist.
The world is rational, but not self-explanatory.
Reality is ordered, yet radically dependent.
In an age increasingly tempted either toward reductionist materialism or toward postmodern skepticism, Aquinas remains unsettling because he insists on both metaphysical realism and existential humility. Human reason can genuinely know reality, but reality itself is grounded in an act of being that exceeds every finite thing.
For Aquinas, existence was not merely a fact.
It was the most profound mystery of all.
Responses
I would like to shift the focus from Aquinas' rational certainties to the existential uncertainties of the here and now man. When the first man became self-conscious, they (sic) realized that they were naked. They covered themselves with vegetation and desperately hid themselves from God. Their behavior was not simple that of shame. There is terror in their actions. Their existential security has utterly become undone. The explanation of what had happened is given in the biblical account of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. As the story goes, the first man was placed by God in a protected garden and was given charge of everything with total freedom except he was forbidden to eat the fruits of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. God himself had planted this tree in the middle of the garden and declared it off limits. Why? Was this tree planted to test and tempt the first man to disobey God? For many interpreters this was a test of faith instituted by God to reveal the weakness of the flesh: God was to demonstrate that desire was stronger than obedience. But what does that say about God? Did God set up the first man to fail? The existence of that tree was not a test. That tree was not there as a test but was there as a necessary component or necessary corollary of creation and reality. God is the creator of everything and as such the earth has a beginning and an end. Therefore the world by definition has existence but also at the same time there is non-existence as a sort of a metaphysical flipside of ex nihilo creation. As soon as the fruit was eaten, the first man’s mind descended from an existence bounded by God’s goodness and defined in objective certainties, into the world of metaphysical uncertainty. All knowledge has suddenly become subjective and as such all knowledge has become self serving and self orientated. It is a world in which everything is defined at the same time by existence and non-existence, the very definition of temporal existence. This story is the prelude to God’s redemption. It sets the stage for God to save man from such an existence. By way of this pre history the biblical account indicates the present condition of man…
Horst’s comment is interesting because it moves the discussion from Aquinas’s ontology to the existential condition that later thinkers such as Søren Kierkegaard and Martin Heidegger would emphasize.
A Thomist might respond that Horst is not actually abandoning Aquinas so much as changing levels of analysis.
Aquinas asks:
What is the metaphysical structure of reality that makes contingent existence possible?
Horst asks:
What does it feel like to be a finite creature who has become aware of contingency?
In Horst’s reading of Genesis, the Fall is not primarily a moral failure but an ontological shock. Adam discovers that he is not self-grounding. Nakedness symbolizes vulnerability. Fear appears because human consciousness awakens to the possibility of loss, death, absence, and non-being.
That is a powerful interpretation.
Where Aquinas might differ is that he would likely resist the claim that “all knowledge became subjective.” Human reason remains capable of genuine knowledge after the Fall, even if wounded and prone to error. Natural law, science, and philosophy remain possible precisely because reality retains intelligible structure.
The deepest connection between the article and Horst’s comment may actually be this:
The article argues that creatures possess existence only by participation. Horst’s Genesis meditation describes the psychological experience of realizing that fact.
Aquinas examines contingency from above, through metaphysics.
Horst examines contingency from within, through lived experience.
One asks why finite beings require an act of being.
The other asks what happens when a finite being becomes conscious of that dependence.
Those are different questions, but they may be describing the same reality from opposite directions.
Yes, in retrospect, I wish I had not made the absolute claim that all knowledge at that instance had become subjective... I overreached a little by trying to account why man became self conscious. Self consciousness remains a mystery in the biblical account and can at most be attributed to the initial temptation. But the reality and knowledge of the existential vulnerability is explained by the act of the eating the forbidden fruit. This prehistory of man very much states a mystery as much as it explains the Fall...