Divine simplicity is the hallmark of God's utter transcendence of all else, ensuring the divine nature to be beyond the reach of ordinary categories and distinctions, or at least their ordinary application.
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Divine simplicity is the hallmark of God's utter transcendence of all else, ensuring the divine nature to be beyond the reach of ordinary categories and distinctions, or at least their ordinary application.
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Clement of Alexandria, Basil and Cyril saw Divine simplicity as preserving the transcendence and the perfection of God.
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Divine simplicity develops this idea to show that an entity which is truly one must be free of properties and thus indescribable – and unlike anything else.
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Spatial Divine simplicity is endorsed by the vast majority of traditional Christian theists .
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Temporal Divine simplicity is endorsed by many theists but is highly controversial among Christian theologians.
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Theologians holding the doctrine of property Divine simplicity tend to distinguish various modes of the simple being of God by negating any notion of composition from the meaning of terms used to describe it.
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Divine simplicity argues that when we have a concept of something like being a horse, we know what it is for something to be a horse.
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Plantinga gives three criticisms of the doctrine of metaphysical Divine simplicity directly, stating that it is exceedingly hard to grasp or construe the doctrine, and it is difficult to see why anyone would be inclined to accept it.
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Rigorous views of divine simplicity were championed by the Mu'tazili, which resulted in a radically apophatic theology.
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