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Created by Izzy Noone
almost 8 years ago
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| Question | Answer |
| Material cause | That out of which a thing is made. The material cause of a statue is its marble or bronze. |
| Formal cause | The blueprint which guides the thing towards its full realisation |
| Efficient cause | The process which brings the thing to thing to completion (eg, the growth of the acorn). |
| Final cause | That for the sake of which (as, for instance, in the case of the oak tree, to produce more acorns, to produce timber, to please the eye, etc.) a thing comes to be. |
| Brute facts | Things that are just there, without any explanation. |
| Potentiality | Imperfection, partiality, finalisability |
| Actuality | Perfection, completeness, totality. |
| Actus Purus | Pure actuality. |
| The Prime Mover | Aristotle’s term for God. God moves without being moved in return. |
| Necessary | Something self-explanatory: it has to exist, and cannot be conceived not to. |
| Contingent | Something whose explanation lies outside itself. It therefore might have existed differently, or not at all. |
| Aseity | From the Latin a se esse, being from oneself, usually translated as “self existence”. Has at least four aspects. |
| Don Cupitt (1934-) | An English philosopher of religion and scholar of Christian theology. He is an Anglican priest and an emeritus professor of the University of Cambridge |
| Sempiternal | The quality of being inside time but lasting for ever. Not the same thing as eternal, which involves being outside time. |
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