Título : | On a complex theory of a simple god | Tipo de documento: | texto impreso | Autores: | Hughes, Philip, Autor | Editorial: | Cornell University Press | Fecha de publicación: | 1989 | Número de páginas: | 281 páginas | Nota general: | <27309> | Idioma : | Inglés | Clasificación: | 201/H88/(ING) | Resumen: | PART I. THE GOD THE PHILOSOPHERS
1- Divine Simplicity God and His Existence – 3
Types of divine simplicity – 3
Form and existence – 5
Are properties individualized particulars – 10
Varieties of esse – 21
Five arguments for the identity of god with his existence – 28
Types of priority – 30
From the posteriority of composita to divine incomposition – 33
Other arguments for divine incomposition – 36
From gods nonpotentiality to the identity of god with his existence – 41
The argument from participation – 50
The argument from god s Uncausedness – 54
The argument from characteristic Effects – 56
2- Divine Simplicity: God and His Attributes
The identity of divine attributes – 60
Insular attributes – 63
The problem of shared attributes – 67
Identity and supervenience – 71
Supervenience and simplicity – 83
3- Divine Simplicity: God and His Nature – 88
Immaterialy and the Relation of a thing to its essence – 88
God and hiss essence – 96
4- Knowledge, Contingency, and Change in god
Intrinsic and extrinsic – 107
Eternity – 114
Omniscience and immutability – 120
Timelessness and openness – 127
Looking back – 149
PART II. THE GOD OF FAITH
5- Is the Doctrine of the Trinity Inconsistent – 153
The apparent inconsistency – 153
Relative identity – 156
Different kinds of difference – 162
Anselm s nile – 166
Types of con composition – 170
Co compositional and the trinity – 176
Compositional and Noncompositional accounts of the trinity – 183
6- Identity and the Trinity
One god and three persons – 188
Three hypostases of one essence – 192
Real relations – 194
Co essential but relationally distinct individual – 207
Identitas secundum rem and identitas secundum rationem – 218
Identity secundum rem and indiscernibility – 223
Identity secundum rem as a non-Euclidean relation – 230
Divine simplicity and the trinity – 239
7- Change, Composition, and the Incarnation – 241
The union of human and divine natures in Christ – 241
The hypostaic union and composition – 250
The incarnation and change – 253
Alternative to Aquinas account – 264
Conclusion – 273
Selected Bibliography – 273
Index – 277
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On a complex theory of a simple god [texto impreso] / Hughes, Philip, Autor . - [S.l.] : Cornell University Press, 1989 . - 281 páginas. <27309> Idioma : Inglés Clasificación: | 201/H88/(ING) | Resumen: | PART I. THE GOD THE PHILOSOPHERS
1- Divine Simplicity God and His Existence – 3
Types of divine simplicity – 3
Form and existence – 5
Are properties individualized particulars – 10
Varieties of esse – 21
Five arguments for the identity of god with his existence – 28
Types of priority – 30
From the posteriority of composita to divine incomposition – 33
Other arguments for divine incomposition – 36
From gods nonpotentiality to the identity of god with his existence – 41
The argument from participation – 50
The argument from god s Uncausedness – 54
The argument from characteristic Effects – 56
2- Divine Simplicity: God and His Attributes
The identity of divine attributes – 60
Insular attributes – 63
The problem of shared attributes – 67
Identity and supervenience – 71
Supervenience and simplicity – 83
3- Divine Simplicity: God and His Nature – 88
Immaterialy and the Relation of a thing to its essence – 88
God and hiss essence – 96
4- Knowledge, Contingency, and Change in god
Intrinsic and extrinsic – 107
Eternity – 114
Omniscience and immutability – 120
Timelessness and openness – 127
Looking back – 149
PART II. THE GOD OF FAITH
5- Is the Doctrine of the Trinity Inconsistent – 153
The apparent inconsistency – 153
Relative identity – 156
Different kinds of difference – 162
Anselm s nile – 166
Types of con composition – 170
Co compositional and the trinity – 176
Compositional and Noncompositional accounts of the trinity – 183
6- Identity and the Trinity
One god and three persons – 188
Three hypostases of one essence – 192
Real relations – 194
Co essential but relationally distinct individual – 207
Identitas secundum rem and identitas secundum rationem – 218
Identity secundum rem and indiscernibility – 223
Identity secundum rem as a non-Euclidean relation – 230
Divine simplicity and the trinity – 239
7- Change, Composition, and the Incarnation – 241
The union of human and divine natures in Christ – 241
The hypostaic union and composition – 250
The incarnation and change – 253
Alternative to Aquinas account – 264
Conclusion – 273
Selected Bibliography – 273
Index – 277
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