Manuel         
         
Count Timothy von Icarus         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         Possible worlds are simply a way of saying if God what could be/have been the case.
According to most Christians, including Thomists, it could have been that God created a completely different world or even no world at all.
My question is if God's essence is his existence , how can He end up xiiling to create different things? — Walter
Walter         
         
Ali Hosein         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         Well, I am not saying that God can will conficting things. But God's will to create A cannot be identical to God's will to create B, unless God is not simple or has no control over what He creates.
A Will, no matter what it exactly is, is intrinsic to a person. — Walter
Walter         
         
LuckyR         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         Well, we are not talking about God creating A at t1 and B at t2, we are talking about God creating B instead of A, which, according to most Thomists, is prefectly possible. — Walter
Count Timothy von Icarus         
         
Walter         
         
Walter         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         The question is: was it possible for God to create B instead of A? The Thomist's answer is yes. — Walter
Metaphysician Undercover         
         That means there are two Gods — Walter
Walter         
         
Corvus         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         God is simple and immutable, but He can be red of blue?
The redness or blueness of God is a contingent property. But if God is necessary and simple He is identical to all His properties. But how can a necessary being be identical to a contingent property? — Walter
Walter         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         I have been talking about God's Will to create A and God's Will to create B.
Are they different or is God's Will to create A the same as God's Will to create B? — Walter
If they are different, then they are contingent properties. — Walter
Walter         
         
Lionino         
         The doctrine of Divine simplicity, according to which God is absolutely simple, has been out of favour for a while now in both Christian theology and philosophy. It is accused of being inconsistent with the doctrine of the Incarnation (Hughes 1989: 253–64), with that of the Trinity (Moreland and Craig 2003: 586) and of being incoherent in its own right (Plantinga 1980: 46–61)." — Christopher Tomaszewski
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