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very being of the
essence. To them, therefore, essence and existence are identical. They argued
that the Judgment, "Man is animal", is possible only on the ground of a
fundamental difference between the subject and the predicate; since their
identity would make the judgment nugatory, and complete difference would make
the predication false. It is, therefore, necessary to postulate an external
cause to determine the various forms of existence. Their opponents, however,
admit the determination or limitation of existence, but they maintain that all
the various forms, of existence, in so far as their essence is concerned, are
identical - all being limitations of one Primary substance. The followers of
Aristotle met the difficulty suggested by the possibility of synthetic
predication, by advocating the possibility of compound essences. Such a judgment
as "Man is animal", they maintained, is true; because man is an essence composed
of two essences, animality and humanity. This, retorted the Ash`arite, cannot
stand criticism. If you say that the essence of man and animal is the same, you
in other words hold that the essence of the whole is the same as that of the
part. But this proposition is absurd; since if the essence of the compound is
the same as that of its constituents, the compound will have to be regarded as
one being having two essences or existences.

It is obvious that the whole controversy turns on the question whether
existence is a mere idea or something objectively real. When we say that a
certain thing exists, do we mean that it exists only in relation

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