Actus et potentia

Actus et potentia

Actus et potentia is a technical expression in Aristotelianism and Scholasticism.

"Potentia" (Greek "dunamis") expresses a potential or capacity, a non-realized possibility for which there is still an ability or disposition. "Actus" (Greek "energeia") refers to the realized deed or the acting out of such a potential.

The terms are from Aristotle's "Physics" and "Metaphysics". As such, they include, but extend beyond, the notion of physical energy (potential energy vs. work), for example also referring to psychological or spiritual potential.

Terminology

The terms "actus" and "potentia" were used by the scholastics to translate Aristotle's use of the terms "energeia" or "entelecheia", and "dynamis". There is no single word in English that would be an exact rendering of either. Act, action, actuality, perfection, and determination express the various meanings of "actus"; potency, potentiality, power, and capacity, those of "potentia".

In general, "potentia" means an aptitude to change, to act or to be acted upon, to give or to receive some new determination. "Actus" means the fulfillment of such a capacity. So, "potentia" always refers to something in the future, which at present exists only as a germ to be evolved; "actus" denotes the corresponding complete reality. In a word, "potentia" is the determinable being, "actus" the determined being.

The term "actus", therefore, has a much greater extension than act or operation. Every operation is an "actus", because it is the complement of a power; but all other perfections and determinations, whatever their nature is, are also "actus". However, the being in "potentia" is not to be identified with the possible being. The latter belongs to the logical order; it is a notion whose elements involve no contradiction. The former belongs to the real order; it exists in a subject which, though undetermined, is capable of determination.

"Potentia" is more than a mere statement of futurity, which has reference to time only; it implies a positive aptitude to be realized in the future.

It would also be a mistake to restrict scholastic "actus" and "potentia" to the notion of energy or work in physics. The scholastic terms apply to all, even spiritual, beings, and refer to any reality which they possess or can acquire.

The Aristotelian "energy" ("actus"), considered as actuality, can never be potential, as these two terms are opposed to each other. Actuality and potentiality are mutually exclusive, since one means the presence, and the other the absence, of the same determination. Yet, in all beings except God (see "actus purus") there is a combination of actuality and potentiality; they possess some determinations and are capable of acquiring others. Moreover, the same reality may be considered as actuality or potentiality. In man, skill and science are actualities if compared to human nature, which they presuppose. But compared to the actions themselves or to the actual recall of acquired knowledge to consciousness, they are powers, or "potentiae". If the same point of view is kept, it is impossible for the same thing to be at the same time "in actu" and "in potentia" with regard to the same determination.

Aristotle and St. Thomas explain this theory by many illustrations. One such example is that a statue exists potentially in the block of marble, because marble has an aptitude to receive the shape of a statue. This aptitude is something real in the marble, since many other substances are deprived of it. It is a receptive potentiality. With regard to the same statue, the sculptor has the power, by his action, to carve the marble into the form of a statue. His is an active power, a real skill or ability which is lacking in many other persons. In order to have the actual statue ("actus"), it is necessary for the sculptor to exercise ("actus") his real skill ("potentia") on a substance which is not yet a statue, but which has a real aptitude ("potentia") to become one. In general, potentia has no meaning, and cannot be defined except through the corresponding actus.

Distinction

The distinction between "potentia" and "actus" is at the basis of, and pervades, the whole scholastic system of philosophy and theology. Whatever is determinable is considered as potential with regard to the actual determination. Genus and species, subject and predicate, quantity and shape, child and adult, matter and form of the sacraments, etc., are examples of potentiality and actuality. This view must be confined to the fundamental applications in metaphysics and in psychology.

#In metaphysics, the distinction runs through the ten Aristotelian categories. All being, whether substance or accident, is either "in actu" or "in potentia". The essence of creatures is a potentiality with regard to their existence. Material substances are composed of primary matter and substantial form (see matter and form), matter being a pure potentiality, i.e., wholly undetermined, and form being the first determination given to matter. Efficient causality is also an application of potentiality and actuality; the cause, when at rest, remains able to act. Change is a transition from the state of potentiality to that of actuality. Generation, growth, and evolution suppose a capacity which becomes fulfilled.
#In psychology, special emphasis is laid on the reality of the "potentiae", or faculties, and their distinction both from the soul and from their operations. External senses are determined or actualized by an external stimulus (see species), which gives them the determination necessary to the act of perception. The internal senses ("sensus communis", "phantasia", "memoria", "aestimativa") depend on external sensations for their exercise. Memory and imagination preserve "in potentia" traces of past impressions, and when the proper conditions are verified the image becomes actual. We have no innate ideas, but in the beginning human intelligence is simply a power to acquire ideas. By its operation, the active power of the intellect ("intellectus agens") forms the species "intelligibilis" or the determination necessary to the intelligence ("intellectus possibilis") for its cognitive act. All tendency and desire is actualized by some good which one strives to acquire. In rational psychology man is conceived as one substantial being, composed of body and soul, or matter and form, united as "potentia" and "actus".

There is a tendency today in nearly all the sciences towards "actuality" theories. But, if analyzed carefully, such theories will necessarily yield potential elements. In all things there are capacities for further development and evolution, forces and aptitudes which come to be utilized little by little. In scholastic terminology these are now real, but not actual. They exist only as "potentiae", which, to manifest themselves, await the proper actualization.

References

*catholic
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01124a.htm Actus et Potentia] at Catholic Encyclopedia

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