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Single Idea 19457

[filed under theme 7. Existence / A. Nature of Existence / 3. Being / a. Nature of Being ]

Full Idea

Being in the sense in which it is an object of speculative thought is that which is purely and simply unmediated, that is, undetermined; in other words, there is nothing to distinguish and nothing to think of in being.

Gist of Idea

Being is what is undetermined, and hence indistinguishable

Source

Ludwig Feuerbach (Principles of Philosophy of the Future [1843], 26)

Book Ref

Feuerbach,Ludwig: 'The Fiery Brook: Selected Writings', ed/tr. Hanfi,Zawar [Anchor 1972], p.213


A Reaction

This sounds remarkably like the idea of 'prime matter' used in scholastic Aristotelian philosophy. Matter existing without form is somehow ungraspable, but presented from Hegel onwards as the ultimate mystery.

Related Ideas

Idea 15771 Primary matter is what characterises other stuffs, and it has no distinct identity [Aristotle]

Idea 16589 Prime matter lacks essence, but is only potentially and indeterminately a physical thing [Auriol]

Idea 16571 Prime matter is exceptionally obscure [Zabarella]


The 28 ideas with the same theme [the nature of pure being]:

No necessity could produce Being either later or earlier, so it must exist absolutely or not at all [Parmenides]
Being must be eternal and uncreated, and hence it is timeless [Parmenides]
Being is not divisible, since it is all alike [Parmenides]
Being is one [Melissus, by Aristotle]
True Being only occurs when it is completely full, with atoms and no void [Democritus, by Aristotle]
There are four kinds of being: incidental, per se, potential and actual, and being as truth [Aristotle, by Wedin]
Being is either what falls in the categories, or what makes propositions true [Aristotle, by Aquinas]
Things are predicated of the basic thing, which isn't predicated of anything else [Aristotle]
There is only being in a certain way, and without that way there is no being [Aristotle]
Being, taken simply as being, is the domain of philosophy [Aristotle]
The concept of being has only one meaning, whether talking of universals or of God [Duns Scotus, by Dumont]
Being (not sensation or God) is the primary object of the intellect [Duns Scotus, by Dumont]
Only supernatural means could annihilate anything once it had being [Hobbes]
Absolute thought remains in another world from being [Feuerbach]
Being is what is undetermined, and hence indistinguishable [Feuerbach]
Our goal is to reveal a new hidden region of Being [Husserl]
Being is what belongs to every possible object of thought [Russell]
Reducing being to the study of beings too readily accepts the modern scientific view [Heidegger, by May]
For us, Being is constituted by awareness of other sorts of Being [Heidegger]
Only language is understandable Being [Gadamer]
Ontology can be continual creation, not to know being, but to probe the unknowable [Deleuze]
'Being' is univocal, but its subject matter is actually 'difference' [Deleuze]
Necessary beings (numbers, properties, sets, propositions, states of affairs, God) exist in all possible worlds [Plantinga]
There is no Being as a whole, because there is no set of all sets [Badiou]
Mathematics inscribes being as such [Badiou]
Every proposition is entirely about being [Lewis]
To grasp being, we must say why something exists, and why there is one world [Jacquette]
Being is substantial/accidental, complete/incomplete, necessary/contingent, possible, relative, intrinsic.. [Oderberg]