The intention of genus or species is not appropriate to the essence as the essence is not signified as a whole
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Essence signifies something common to all natures through which various beings are placed in various genera and species 1 0 2The essence of a genus and the essence of a species differ as signate from non-signate 1 0 2The genus signifies indeterminately the whole that is in the species and does not signify matter alone 1 0 2The genus is taken from the matter as signifying the whole 1 0 2The species, as predicated of the individual, signify everything that is in the individual essentially, although it signifies this indistinctly 1 0 2The genus, as predicated of the species, includes in its signification everything that is in the species determinately 1 0 2The intentions of genus or species or difference are predicated of this signate singular 1 0 2The intention of genus or species is appropriate to the essence as the essence is signified as a whole 1 0 2God is not in a genus because his essence is not other than his existence 1 0 2In accidents, the genus, difference, and species are taken differently than in substances 1 0 2