According to Thomas Aquinas, God can also be defined as the act of all acts, the perfection of all perfections and the perfect Being. This Being is also called being in the strong sense or intensive Being (
Esse ut actus, or
Actus essendi) to distinguish it from being in the weak sense or common being (
esse commune) of all created entities. The intensive Being includes every possible determination, thus excludes any other addition, is the highest real perfection; the common being is the highest
abstraction and the lowest
perfection, universal and totally indeterminate, indifferent to any addition (which neither excludes nor even includes). The common being is the object of
metaphysics, which studies being as being in the
universal manner. According to Fr Battista Mondin, the common being is also analogical, like the intensive Being. Otherwise, if the common being were to be preached unambiguously, all entities would be reduced to a single entity. God cannot coincide with the common being because it would be reduced to a mere abstraction existing in the human mind alone. While the common being is
immanent like all the entities which it is abstracted from, instead the intensive Being, who is God Himself, is
transcendent. Both of them are transcendental in respect of the nine Aristotelian
categories. An univocal common being is the object of the philosophies of
Parmenides and
Plato, as well as of
Scotus,
Suárez, and
Wolff. An immanent Being is the object of the philosophies of
Plotinus,
Hegel and
Heidegger. The most perfect Being (or
Esse ipsum subsistens, Being that subsists by itself and not in virtue of other-from-itself), is as strong and powerful, intelligent and free, noble and precious, profound and intimate to creatures, as nobody else can exist. ==See also==