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Comment: Migrated to Confluence 4.0

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In this connection, I recall how Hartshorne explains his statement, "God's essence is an empty outline, and is infinitely less than the divine actuality." 

Wiki Markup
                              But this empty outline \[, he says,\] is still not in the most extreme sense nothing. Nothing is one of two things: either it is a mere word, with no objective designation at all; or it is the realm of primordial possibilities, apart from all particular actualizations. Objective nothing can only be pure possibility. Now this pure possibility (which is itself not possible but real) is not completely without difference, but only without actual (specific and particular) difference. It has a certain structure _\[sic\!\],_ and this structure is that of God-world-no particular world, and not God knowing any particular world (or with any determinate actual content of intuition), but God-as-such knowing world-as such. Thus God in his essence is the inseparable correlate of world-in-general. If a certain world is actual, then God actually knows this world; and to say 'such and such a world is possible,' is the same as saying, 'such and such a sort of world might be divinely intuited as a determinate actuality: This correlation, God-as-such and world-as-such, is not 'nothing' in the sense of a phrase without designation, but is an objective abstract aspect of every actual slate of God World. God-as-such is not an actuality, but yet it exists \[necessarily\], by virtue _of some suitable actuality or other ("The Divine Relativity and Absoluteness: A Reply": 44).

                              But this empty outline [, he says,] is still not in the most extreme sense nothing. Nothing is one of two things: either it is a mere word, with no objective designation at all; or it is the realm of primordial possibilities, apart from all particular actualizations. Objective nothing can only be pure possibility. Now this pure possibility (which is itself not possible but real) is not completely without difference, but only without actual (specific and particular) difference. It has a certain structure [sic!], and this structure is that of God-world-no particular world, and not God knowing any particular world (or with any determinate actual content of intuition), but God-as-such knowing world-as such. Thus God in his essence is the inseparable correlate of world-in-general. If a certain world is actual, then God actually knows this world; and to say 'such and such a world is possible,' is the same as saying, 'such and such a sort of world might be divinely intuited as a determinate actuality: This correlation, God-as-such and world-as-such, is not 'nothing' in the sense of a phrase without designation, but is an objective abstract aspect of every actual slate of God World. God-as-such is not an actuality, but yet it exists [necessarily], by virtue _of some suitable actuality or other ("The Divine Relativity and Absoluteness: A Reply": 44).

I take this to mean that, because pure possibility is not itself possible but real, it it is not completely without difference-there being the difference, namely, between primordial possibilities themselves and their ground. This difference, however, is not an "actual," which is to say, specific and particular, difference between this possibility's being actualized instead of that, but merely a real difference that obtains no matter what possibilities are realized. As such, it has "a certain structure," that of "God-[W]orld," or "God-as-such knowing world-as such." And although this structure is not actual but only real, and, as such, is, indeed, an "empty outline," it is nevertheless "not 'nothing' in the sense of a phrase without objective designation," but is "an objective abstract aspect of every actual state of God-World," and so "what will obtain no matter which possibilities are actualized."  Wiki MarkupI take this to mean that, because pure possibility is not itself possible but real, it it is not completely without difference-there being the difference, namely, between primordial possibilities themselves and their ground. This difference, however, is not an "actual," which is to say, specific and particular, difference between this possibility's being actualized instead of that, but merely a real difference that obtains no matter what possibilities are realized. As such, it has "a certain structure," that of "God-\[W\]orld," or "God-as-such knowing world-as such." And although this structure is not actual but only real, and, as such, is, indeed, an "empty outline," it is nevertheless "not 'nothing' in the sense of a phrase without objective designation," but is "an objective abstract aspect of every actual state of God-World," and so "what will obtain no matter which possibilities are actualized." 

But if this interpretation catches Hartshorne's meaning, then it seems clear to me that he himself, in his way, interprets the necessary as precisely "structure," as distinct from content, even the content signified by less abstract and therefore contingent rather than necessary abstracts, i.e., categories, genera, species, and individualities.

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