Lecture 54

54. Act and Ability: From Motion to Universal Understanding

Summary
Reading 5-6 of Aristotle’s Metaphysics Book IX extends the discussion of act beyond motion to a more universal understanding. Berquist explains why act cannot be defined (drawing on Aristotle’s principle that not everything can be defined), how act is known through induction and proportion rather than definition, and introduces a crucial distinction between imperfect acts (motion, doing—incomplete while occurring) and perfect acts (operations like seeing, understanding, loving—complete while occurring). This distinction has profound implications for understanding human happiness and divine nature.

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Lecture Notes

Main Topics #

The Ascent to Universal Understanding of Act #

  • Aristotle moves from examining act specifically as motion (Readings 1-4) to examining act universally (Readings 5-6)
  • This methodological approach mirrors Aristotle’s treatment of substance and the one (ἕν/hen): ascending from less universal to more universal considerations
  • The goal is to show that act applies even to immaterial things not subject to motion in the strict sense
  • With the universal treatment of act comes a new, broader understanding of ability (δύναμις/dynamis)

Why Act Cannot Be Defined #

  • Fundamental Principle: Not everything can be defined; some things must be known without definition
  • Logical Parallel: Just as not every statement can be proven (this would require infinite regress and make knowledge impossible), not every term can be defined
  • If every definition required a prior definition, infinite regress would prevent any knowledge of essences
  • Therefore, some things must be known without definition—these are foundational to all other knowledge
  • Act is one of these fundamental, indefinable realities
  • Ability (δύναμις/dynamis), by contrast, can be defined—it is defined through act: “the beginning or source of motion in another or in the same thing as other”

Act Known Through Induction and Proportion #

  • Since act cannot be defined, Aristotle employs two methods to make it known:
    1. Induction (ἐπαγωγή/epagoge): Examining particulars to grasp the universal
    2. Proportion (ἀναλογία/analogia): Seeing likeness of ratios (not merely mathematical ratio, but analogy)
  • Proportion Examples from Aristotle:
    • The one actually building is to the house builder as the one awake is to the one asleep
    • The one seeing is to one with eyes closed (but not blind) as formed matter is to matter
    • That which is worked up is to the unworked
  • These examples show act can be understood by grasping how it relates to ability in different domains
  • Form is proportional to matter as seeing is to the eye closed but capable of sight

Equivocation by Reason (Λόγος/Logos) #

  • Act is said equivocally in multiple senses, but not equivocally by chance
  • It is equivocal by reason of proportion: the word “act” is applied to different realities because they share a proportional relationship
  • The primary sense is act as motion or doing (τὸ κινεῖσθαι/to kinesthai)
  • The secondary sense extends to form, understood as proportional to matter just as motion is proportional to ability
  • Form is also both:
    • The end of motion (what motion tends toward)
    • The beginning of further motion (things act through their form)
  • This shows act is not merely an accident of language but rooted in the intelligible structure of reality

Two Fundamental Kinds of Act #

Imperfect Acts (Motion/Doing) #

  • Characteristic: Essentially incomplete while occurring; cannot coexist with their completion
  • Examples: Walking, building a house, learning, making dinner, becoming healthy
  • Grammatical test: “I am walking” and “I have walked” are mutually exclusive
    • While walking, you have not yet walked (incomplete)
    • When you have walked, you are no longer walking (complete, activity ceases)
  • Nature: These acts have a limit or end toward which they tend, but no part of the act is fully realized until completion
  • Transitive character: Often involve external matter (building acts upon a house; teaching acts upon students)

Perfect Acts (Operations/Ἐνέργεια/Energeia) #

  • Characteristic: Complete while occurring; the completion does not terminate the act
  • Examples: Seeing, understanding (νοεῖν/noein), loving (ἀγαπᾶν/agapan), sensing
  • Grammatical test: “I am seeing” and “I have seen” can be simultaneous
    • While seeing, you have already seen (complete at every moment)
    • When you have seen, you remain in the state of seeing
  • Nature: The act remains whole within the agent at every moment; it does not tend toward an external completion
  • Intrinsic character: These acts remain within the agent; they do not require external matter for their completion
  • Philosophical importance: These constitute human happiness and flourishing (εὐδαιμονία/eudaimonia), not the imperfect acts

The Problem of Naming #

  • Latin uses motio for imperfect acts and operatio for perfect acts, but these terms are imperfect
  • Aristotle’s Greek text uses different terminology that does not translate perfectly into English or Latin
  • The distinction itself is more important than the naming conventions

The Infinite and Unsatisfied Ability #

  • Some abilities can never be fully actualized
  • Example: The Continuous Line
    • A straight line can be bisected infinitely
    • Each bisection produces two shorter lines (never points or nothingness)
    • The ability to divide is never fully satisfied
    • One cannot create points from a line through division; points are actualized only through the cut, but the result is always lines
  • Other examples: The ability of numbers to increase indefinitely; the ability to reflect upon oneself infinitely (“I know that I know that I know…”)
  • This represents a third category of ability: one that remains open infinitely, distinct from both fully actualizable abilities and form

Key Arguments #

Against Descartes and Locke on the Indefinability of Motion #

  • The Error: Both philosophers denied that motion could be defined, claiming it is a “simple idea” that cannot be decomposed
  • Descartes’ Dismissal: He quoted Aristotle’s definition garbled and said “Who understands that by just playing with words?”
  • Locke’s Position: Motion is simple and simple ideas cannot be defined
  • Aristotle’s Response: Motion can be defined through act and ability: “the act of what is able to be, insofar as it is able to be”
  • The Consequence of Denying Motion’s Definability:
    • If motion is undefined, then natural philosophy (which depends on understanding motion) is compromised
    • The entire argument for the unmoved mover (the first and most manifest argument for God’s existence) collapses
    • The consequences are grave for metaphysics and natural theology

The First Argument for God’s Existence #

  • Motion is the most known act to us (things in motion catch the eye immediately)
  • Yet motion is the least actual of acts (no part of motion is ever fully actual; it is essentially incomplete)
  • This exemplifies Aristotle’s principle: what is most known to us is least noble in being; what is least known is most noble
  • The argument proceeds: from things in motion → to the necessity of an unmoved mover → to the existence of God
  • Without a clear definition and understanding of motion, this foundational argument cannot be made

Important Definitions #

  • Act (ἐνέργεια/energeia): The existence of a thing, not in the way of ability; the actualization of potential. Act can be understood through induction and proportion rather than definition.
  • Ability (δύναμις/dynamis): The beginning or source of motion in another or in the same thing as other. Can be partially defined through the act to which it tends.
  • Form (εἶδος/eidos): The actualization of matter; a perfect act. Form is simultaneously the end of motion and the beginning of further motion.
  • Perfect Act (ἐνέργεια τέλεια/energeia teleia): An act that is complete while occurring; examples include seeing, understanding, loving. The act remains within the agent.
  • Imperfect Act / Motion (κίνησις/kinesis): An act that is incomplete while occurring; essentially incomplete. Examples include walking, building, learning. The act tends toward an external completion.
  • Proportion (ἀναλογία/analogia): A likeness of ratios (not a mathematical ratio per se, but an analogical relationship). The means by which equivocal terms like “act” are related by reason rather than by chance.
  • Equivocal by Reason (κατὰ λόγον/kata logon): A term applied to multiple realities not by chance, but in virtue of their proportional relationship to a primary sense.

Examples & Illustrations #

The Hermes Statue #

  • Wood before being shaped has the ability (δύναμις/dynamis) to be a statue of Hermes
  • When the wood is shaped, it becomes actually a statue (form is actualized as a perfect act)
  • This illustrates: matter in ability → form as act
  • Michelangelo saw a slab of marble and saw in it the potential Pietà waiting to be actualized

Geometric Division #

  • A parallelogram contains two triangles in ability (δυνάμει/dynamei) before a diagonal is drawn
  • Drawing the diagonal actualizes the two triangles
  • This demonstrates act and ability in mathematical objects not subject to physical motion
  • The two triangles are present in the parallelogram potentially, then actually

Seeing and Geometry Proof #

  • A student studies geometry: while studying, the student is learning (imperfect act, ability being actualized)
  • When the student goes to the board and diagrams the Pythagorean theorem, the student is going from ability to act
  • This is an example of an imperfect act (motion from potential knowledge to actual knowledge)
  • The student moves from ability to understand → to actually understanding

Perfect vs. Imperfect Acts Compared #

  • Walking home (imperfect act): While walking, I have not yet walked home. When I have walked home, I am no longer walking.
  • Seeing you (perfect act): While seeing you, I have already seen you. The act of seeing is complete at each moment.
  • Building a house (imperfect act): While building, the house is not built. When it is built, building ceases.
  • Loving (perfect act): While loving you, I have already loved you. The act of love is complete in the present moment.
  • Understanding a triangle (perfect act): While understanding what a triangle is, I have understood it. The understanding remains complete throughout.

Reading and Cognition #

  • Reading a page: an imperfect act (while reading, you have not yet read it)
  • Thinking about what you have read: a perfect act (you are simultaneously thinking and have thought)
  • This shows the difference in structure between activities that are ordered to a completion and those that contain their completion

Notable Quotes #

“Act, then, is the existence of a thing, not in the way in which we say an ability.” — Aristotle, Physics IX, as read by Berquist

“One should not seek a definition of everything.” — Aristotle, Physics IX, cited approvingly by Berquist

“If every statement was in need of being proven, you couldn’t even begin to prove anything.” — Berquist, explaining Aristotle’s principle that not all statements require proof

“Not everything had to be defined… Something had to be known without definition.” — Berquist, on the necessity of foundational indefinables

“At the same time, we are living well, and have lived well, right? And are happy, and have been happy.” — Aristotle, Physics IX, illustrating the perfect act of happiness

“For every movement is incomplete.” — Aristotle, Physics IX, defining the essential incompleteness of imperfect acts

“The one who is actually building a house, is to the house builder, as the one who is awake, is to the one who is asleep.” — Aristotle, Physics IX, providing proportional examples for understanding act

Questions Addressed #

Why can’t act be defined? #

  • Act is a fundamental, irreducible reality
  • If everything had to be defined through prior definitions, infinite regress would make knowledge impossible
  • Just as not every statement can be proven, not every term can be defined
  • Some things must be known through induction (examining particulars) and proportion (seeing analogical relationships)
  • This does not make act unintelligible; it makes it known in a primary way, rather than through definition

How do perfect and imperfect acts differ in their essential structure? #

  • Imperfect acts are incomplete while occurring; they have a temporal structure directed toward a completion that terminates the act
  • Perfect acts are complete while occurring; they remain whole within the agent at every moment
  • Grammatically: imperfect acts make “I am X-ing” and “I have X-ed” mutually exclusive; perfect acts make them simultaneous
  • This structural difference determines their suitability for happiness: happiness consists in perfect acts, not imperfect ones

How do we know act if it cannot be defined? #

  • Through induction: examining particular instances to grasp the universal
  • Through proportion: seeing how act relates to ability in different domains through analogical relationships
  • Example: as the one awake is to the one asleep, so the one actually seeing is to the one with eyes closed (but not blind)
  • This method of knowing is more primary than definition; it grasps the thing itself rather than its logical structure

Why is the distinction between imperfect and perfect acts philosophically important? #

  • It determines what constitutes human happiness and flourishing
  • It clarifies the nature of divine operations (God’s understanding and love are perfect acts, eternal and complete)
  • It shows why the goal of human life cannot be transitive actions (making, building) but must be intrinsic activities (knowing, loving)
  • It explains why happiness is an activity (ἐνέργεια/energeia), not a state or possession

Can all abilities be fully actualized? #

  • No. Some abilities are never fully satisfied
  • The continuous (what is divisible forever) represents an ability that remains open infinitely
  • A line can be bisected infinitely, always producing shorter lines, never arriving at points or nothingness
  • Numbers can increase infinitely; the ability to reflect upon oneself (“I know that I know that I know…”) is sterile infinity
  • These represent a third category distinct from both fully actualizable abilities and form

Connections to Key Themes #

Methodological Ascent in Aristotle #

  • This lecture exemplifies Aristotle’s method: begin with particular, less universal cases; ascend to the universal
  • Readings 1-4: Act examined only as motion
  • Readings 5-6: Act examined universally, applicable even to immaterial things
  • This same method appears in Aristotle’s treatment of substance (material → universal) and the one (numerical → convertible with being)

The Problem of Knowing Immaterial Being #

  • We know immaterial being through concepts derived from material being
  • We use both concrete words (like “act”) and abstract words (like “actuality”) to speak of God
  • In material things, there is a real distinction between what something is and that by which it is
  • In God, this distinction does not exist (God’s essence is his existence)
  • Yet we cannot simply discard one set of concepts; we must understand how they relate analogically

The Consequences of Denying Motion’s Definability #

  • Descartes and Locke’s denial that motion can be defined has grave consequences:
    • Natural philosophy loses its foundation
    • The argument for the unmoved mover (the first argument for God) becomes impossible
    • The entire metaphysical edifice that depends on understanding motion collapses
  • This shows why precision in metaphysical understanding is not merely academic but foundational to theology and natural philosophy