[4.16.3] Meister Eckhart on God, Intellect and Trancendentals

(This post zooms in the structure presented in [4.16.1])

Meister Eckhart (Eckhart von Hochheim 1260 – 1328 AD), in different works written in Latin and German language (Opus Tripartitum, Essential Sermons) writes about the inner structure of the trinitarian God:

  • Eckhart states (unlike Avicenna [3.3.1] and Thomas Aquinas [4.9.3]), that essence of God is the Divine Intellect, which is prior to its being.
  • The transcendentals, which are being, one, truth, good, primarily refer to God, not to creatures, things, as Philip the Chancellor (see [4.7]) and Thomas Aquinas sustain: “according to Thomas, the transcendentals belong to the level of ens or esse commune, while for Eckhart they belong primarily to God.”
  • Eckhart equates the transcendentals with the different persons of the Trinty (Father – One, Son – Truth, Holy Spirit – Good), grounding his theology into philosophy.

The following OntoUML diagram shows Eckhart’s model of God:

ClassDescriptionRelations
EssenceEssence, is the property or set of properties that defines the identity of a substance, and which it has by necessity, and without which ceases to exist. See also [4.9.3]
(Divine)Intellect“Eckhart shows that God possesses no Being outside his thinking. Rather, he possesses unity as the identity of thinking and Being. He is thus pure and uncreatable [Divine] intellect.
Since God is nothing other than pure intellect, it was only through the intellect that he gave all the creatures existence. The unity proper to God is therefore ‘nowhere and never anywhere else than in the intellect, and here too it is not, but is thought.’ Accordingly, God’s unity is realized in his being spirit, which is identical with God. In another passage in the same sermon, Eckhart expresses, with a clarity that could scarcely be stronger, this conviction that God’s simple essence is spirit and nothing else than spirit: ‘The one God is intellect and the intellect is the one God. This is why God is never and nowhere God other than in the intellect’. (Enders)
subkind of Essence; exclusive part of God
GodTrinitarian God
Father“the One or Father initiates the origination of the whole of divinity and all creatures (thus, in the latter case, the generation of plurality), he is the original unity in the divinity.” role of God; communicates, begets Son
SonFor Eckhart it means that the One as the One and Father generates the truth—the third transcendental— as the Son proceeds only from the Father. So the third transcendental (verum) is equated with the Son.” (Hackett, Hart Weed) role of God
HolySpirit(Love)“As later texts by Eckhart show, however, this necessity is based in God’s essential goodness or love. Since God is truly good, and being good consists in communicating oneself, giving a share ungrudgingly in one’s own fullness, and pouring oneself out (bonum est diffusivum sui), God as the perfect good must be ‘the most communicative of all,’ that is to say, the pure gift of self. In his Book of the Divine Consolation, Eckhart expounds this self-communicating love of God in terms of Trinitarian theology: the perfect equality of the divine Son with the divine Father is the ‘ground’ within the Godhead for the ‘birth’ of the Holy Spirit as the divine being of pure love—which is the love of the divine Son for the divine Father. Selflessness, equality, and universality characterize this pure love of the perfect good, into which the human being who has become the son of God by grace is called to enter.” (Enders)
“Father and Son are related to each other. They are to be thought of as Father and as Son only in this relation. At the same time, they relate to each other reciprocally: one is not to think of the Father without the Son nor the Son without Father. If the Son is, so too is the Father, and if the Father exists, so too does the Son. Therefore, one cannot think of any time in which the Father would exist without the Son. […]
Goodness (bonum) belongs to love [the Holy Spirit] and connects them both, Father and Son. It is this connection itself.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)
relates Father with Son
Being“Eckhart starts the argument with the declaration that nothing
arises from the indifferent and the indefinite. He argues that these characteristics (the transcendentals) are suitable for being (esse), because being applies to the inner and essence. So, being is equated with the divine essence. [that is the Divine Intellect].” (Hackett, Hart Weed)
characterizes DivineEssence; subkind of Trancendental
One“Eckhart follows book ten of Aristotle’s Metaphysics and argues that the One as the One is definite through its being one. The One is clearly distinguishable from plurality. Therefore, the One according to its content and peculiarity is the origin of plurality and, hence, the origin of all divinity and of all creatures. Thus, the One is equated with the Father, who is the first origin. Also, as the One or Father initiates the origination of the whole of divinity and all creatures (thus, in the latter case, the generation of plurality), he is the original unity in the divinity. The Father is the One as unity; as unity he is the essence or the essential unity, and being in the One is not being as common being any more, it is simply the One itself.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)characterizes Father; subkind of Transcendental
Truth“One is not being as common being any more, it is simply the One itself. The One at the same time is the prior; hence it is the origin of all. To be the origin means that the One creates everything that is created after the One according to a certain order. For Eckhart it means that the One as the One and Father generates the truth—the third transcendental— as the Son proceeds only from the Father. So the third transcendental (verum) is equated with the Son.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)characterizes Son; subkind of Transcendental
Good“Father (unum) and Son (verum) are one whole, insofar as they have the divine essence (i.e. the same kind of being). The consequence of this unity is the goodness that is generated from the One (Father) and the truth (Son). Goodness (bonum) belongs to love and connects them both, Father and Son. It is this connection itself.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)characterizes HolySpirit(Love); subkind of Transcendental
Transcendental“The main questions of the first four treatises of the Opus tripartitum are Being, Unity, Truth, Goodness, and the concepts that are opposed to these. One significant characteristic of Eckhart’s theory of transcendentals is that they apply primarily not to common being (ens commune) but to the inner life of God. In his Expositio sancti evangelii secundum Iohannem, Eckhart claims that:
‘Those properties which are God’s own are Being or being, Unity, Truth, Goodness. For God has these four transcendental as properties in as much as is ‘the first,’ which is ‘rich in itself.’ God has these because the rich in itself has that which is proper to itself. For the aforementioned four (terms) are for everyone ‘guests’ within the First, and ‘immigrants,’ household members to God.’
In this, Eckhart uses the theory of the transcendentals to provide a philosophical explanation of the inner divine life of the Trinity. Through it, he achieves a new dimension in speculative thinking about the Trinity that leads to the equating of the persons of the Trinity with the transcendentals.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)

Sources:

  • Hackett, Jeremiah and Hart Weed, Jennifer: “From Aquinas to Eckhart on Creation, Creature, and Analogy”, A companion to Meister Eckhart, Brill 2013, edited by Jeremiah M. Hackett.
  • Enders, Markus: “Meister Eckhart’s understanding of God”, A companion to Meister Eckhart, Brill 2013, edited by Jeremiah M. Hackett.
  • Mojsisch, Burkhard and Orrin F. Summerell, “Meister Eckhart“, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2011 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)

First published: 25/7/2021

[4.16.1] Meister Eckhart on Transcendentals in God and Creatures

Meister Eckhart (Eckhart von Hochheim 1260 – 1328 AD) in different works written in Latin and German language (Opus Tripartitum, Rechtsfertigungschrift/Defense Document, Essential Sermons) presents an original take on the theory of transcendentals, according to which:

  • The transcendentals, which are being, one, truth, good, primarily refer to God, not to creatures, things, as Philip the Chancellor (see [4.7]) and Thomas Aquinas sustain: “according to Thomas, the transcendentals belong to the level of ens or esse commune, while for Eckhart they belong primarily to God.”
  • The transcendentals explain the inner divine life of the Trinity.
  • God is primarily characterized by being and goodness, while being and truth and being and goodness are convertible.
  • God creates the creatures. The transcendentals in creatures are analogically ordered the real transcendentals (in God). As such, the creature’s existence, oneness, goodness, truth depends, “eats” from the existence, oneness, goodness, truth of God.

The following OntoUML diagram shows Eckhart’s model of transcendentals:

Meister Eckhart on transcendence in God and creatures
ClassDescriptionRelations
(Trinitarian)God“Eckhart uses the theory of the transcendentals to provide a philosophical explanation of the inner divine life of the Trinity [trinitarian God]. Through it, he achieves a new dimension in speculative thinking about the Trinity that leads to the equating of the persons of the Trinity with the transcendentals. […]
The integration of henological and ontological discourses builds the following ontological scheme: God is Being (esse) per se as well as One (unum) per se. […]
only God is Being, One, True, and Good in the full sense of these words.” (Tsopurashvili)
creates Creature
Transcendental“The main questions of the first four treatises of the Opus tripartitum are Being, Unity, Truth, Goodness, and the concepts that are opposed to these. One significant characteristic of Eckhart’s theory of transcendentals is that they apply primarily not to common being (ens commune) but to the inner life of God. In his Expositio sancti evangelii secundum Iohannem, Eckhart claims that:
Those properties which are God’s own are Being or being, Unity, Truth, Goodness. For God has these four transcendental as properties in as much as is ‘the first,’ which is ‘rich in itself.’ God has these because the rich in itself has that which is proper to itself. For the aforementioned four (terms) are for everyone ‘guests’ within the First, and ‘immigrants,’ household members to God.
In this, Eckhart uses the theory of the transcendentals to provide a philosophical explanation of the inner divine life of the Trinity. Through it, he achieves a new dimension in speculative thinking about the Trinity that leads to the equating of the persons of the Trinity with the transcendentals.” (Tsopurashvili)
BeingIn Eckhart’s view “nothing arises from the indifferent and the indefinite. He argues that these characteristics (the transcendentals) are suitable for being (esse), because being applies to the inner and essence. So, being is equated with the divine essence.” (Tsopurashvili) subkind of Transcendental; characterizes (Trinitarian)God
One“The integration of henological and ontological discourses builds the following ontological scheme: God is Being (esse) per se as well as One (unum, [ens]) per se. The One per se means unity, the unity of essence, or even the essential unity. The One as essential unity is without relationality in itself, but as such it is the grounding ground of all entities even through its relationality. God as relationless and the One is the unique One in which one does not find difference (i.e. the difference according to the persons): God as the unique One is neither Father, nor Son, nor Holy Spirit. God as something means that God is completely free from the definite modes of divine Being. So, he is the simple One. The simple One is undefined and simple by comparison with the modes of Trinity. It is determined essentially through its simple and One-Being. Therefore, the simple One, as the positive in regard to the mode of triplicity of being, is negative at the same time as it itself presents the defining moment of being. […]
The One (unum) or the unity (unitas) are the explications of the uniqueness of God.” (Tsopurashvili)
subkind of Transcendental; characterizes (Trinitarian)God
Truth; Good When Meister Eckhart equates the transcendentals with God, he harkens back to the scholastic doctrine about the convertibility of the transcendentals. He formulates this idea with the following words: ‘Unum enim, ens, verum, bonum convertuntur.’ The reason for their convertibility is that all of them can name God in the full sense. He accentuates also the convertibility of Truth with Being as well as the convertibility of Being with Truth: ‘Verum et ens convertuntur.’
Based on this convertibility Eckhart understands truth not only as the truth of a sentence, but also as the truth of Being, that is, truth receives an ontological status through its convertibility with ens and connotes the truth of Being.
It also concerns bonum [Good], which receives ontological status through the convertibility with ens and connotes the goodness of Being. So truth has epistemological as well as ontological meaning: what is true, also is. Goodness expresses the ethical as well as the ontological sense: what is good, also is.” (Tsopurashvili)
subkind of Transcendental; characterizes Being
Creature“God acts and produces things [Creatures] through his divine nature. But God’s nature is intellect, and for him existence is in the understanding. Therefore, he produces all things in existence through intellect.” (Eckhart)
AnalogyAnalogous things are not distinguished according to things, nor through the differences of things, but ‘according to the modes [of being] of one and the same simple thing. For example, one and the same health that is in an animal is that (and no other) which is in the diet and the urine [of the animal] in such a way that there is no more of health as health in the diet and urine as there is in a stone. Urine is said to be ‘healthy’ only because it signifies health, the same in number, which is in the animal, just as a circular piece of wood which has nothing of wine in it [signifies] wine.” (Hackett, Hart Weed) relates Transcendental with Transcendental InCreature
TranscendentalIn CreatureTranscendentals in creatures are analogue and ordered to the transcendentals (in God), and “eat” from those: “Being or existence and every perfection, especially general ones such as existence, oneness, truth, goodness, light, justice, and so forth, are used to describe God in an analogical way. It follows from this that goodness and justice and the like [in creatures] have their goodness totally from something outside to which they are analogically ordered, namely, God. […]
The proof can be briefly summarized and formulated thus. Analogates have nothing of the form according to which they are analogically ordered rooted in positive fashion in themselves. But every created being is analogically ordered to God in existence, truth and goodness. Therefore every created being radically and positively possesses existence, life, a wisdom from and in God, not in themselves as a created being. And thus, it always “eats” as something produced and created, but it always hungers because it is always from another and not from itself.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)
ordered, “eats from” Transcendental
BeingInCreature; OneIn CreatureBeing in creature (esse hoc et hoc) and one in creature (ens hoc et hoc) is analogically ordered to Being and One (in God) and “eat” from those.
“Eckhart’s doctrine of analogy, then, is his way of showing that the creature is not autonomous, that is, in total self-possession of being. It has possession as an imparted possession, on loan as it were. The created is even in its own being a pointing away from itself to Being in itself, to the Absolute Being.” (Hackett, Hart Weed)
subkind of TranscendentalIn Creature; chatacterizes Creature
TruthInCreature; GoodInCreatureTruth in creature (verum hoc et hoc) and good in creature (bonum hoc et hoc) Analogically ordered to Truth and Good (in God) and “eat” from those. subkind of TranscendentalIn Creature; characterizes BeingInCreature

Sources:

  • Tsopurashvili, Tamar: “The Theory of the Transcendentals in Meister Eckhart”, A companion to Meister Eckhart, Brill 2013, edited by Jeremiah M. Hackett.
  • Hackett, Jeremiah and Hart Weed, Jennifer: “From Aquinas to Eckhart on Creation, Creature, and Analogy”, A companion to Meister Eckhart, Brill 2013, edited by Jeremiah M. Hackett.
  • Eckhart: “The Commentaries on the Book of Genesis”, Colledge and McGinn, Meister Eckhart: The Essential Sermons

First published: 11/7/2021