from ENTRIES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2016
It is well known that Descartes replaced the Aristotelian essence/property (proprium)/accident distinction with that between principal attributes and modes (cf. AT VIIIA 25–26, CSM I 210– 12). Among the questions this raises are (1) whether the change is more than terminological; (2) how essence differs from existence (i) in general, (ii) in finite substance, and (iii) in infinite substance; (3) whether, and in what sense (or senses), Descartes is an essentialist; and (4) how essences or definitions are known. Questions regarding the ontology of Cartesian essences are treated elsewhere (see true and immutable nature and universal).
The first question may be answered via the second. How essence differs from existence in general is straightforward enough: the essence of a thing is the answer to the question “What is it?” (Quid est?) as opposed to “Is it?” (An est?). The difference can be illustrated by a mathematical example from the Fifth Meditation:
When, for example, I imagine a triangle, even if perhaps no such figure exists, or has ever existed anywhere outside my thought, there is still a determinate nature, or essence, or form of the triangle which is immutable and eternal, and not invented by me or dependent on my mind. This is clear from the fact that various properties can be demonstrated of the triangle, for example that its three angles are equal two right angles, that its greatest side subtends its greatest angle, and the like.
(AT VII 64, CSM II 44–45)Here two properties are said to follow from the essence of a triangle, loosely defined in the Principles as “a [plane] figure made up of three [straight] lines” (AT VIIIA 28, CSM I 212). The triangle's true and immutable nature (AT VII 68, CSM II 47) or essence is contrasted chiefly with its existence but also with “invented” natures represented by “factitious” ideas (cf. AT VII 38, CSM II 26); in the Principles (where the language of “the Schools” for which the work was written figures more prominently), genus and propria are distinguished from accidentia.
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