Actual refers to the realized state of a thing, including its current properties, form, condition, and category. It points to what a thing is now, not merely what it could become. A seed may have the potential to become a tree, but the actual seed is small, enclosed, and not yet rooted. A person may have many possible futures, but their actual life is the one currently being lived.
In traditional philosophy, actual is often contrasted with potential. Aristotle used this distinction to explain change. Potential refers to what can become real. Actual refers to what has become real. A block of marble has the potential to become a statue, but once shaped by the sculptor, the statue is actual. These terms are metaphysical because they describe possibility, reality, and becoming.
In TST Philosophy, actual is used carefully because it helps separate what is real now from what is merely possible, imagined, hoped for, or projected. A thing’s actual state includes its current form, properties, condition, and place inside a framework. When we talk about human growth, virtue, or flourishing, potential matters, but actual matters too. It asks what has really been developed, practiced, embodied, or brought into reality.
This places actual inside the TST metaphysical split. In the material world, actual is what has become real. In the mind, actual is the idea of what has been instantiated inside a framework. Potential and actual become ontological when we ask what kind of existence possibility has. They become ethical when we ask what a person, action, or life can become, and what it has actually become.