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If quality change was a real change in essence then the change of x from being lone child to sister should be a change in the essence of x. You could say x had the potency to become a sister and then, with the birth of y, this potency was actualised.
First, in this example, though it’s a change, the change is not a change in the essence because the sister’s essence is not identical to any of her attributes or qualities. But God’s being is not like this though. His essence is identical to His attributes, so a change in them is a change in it. Second, the example you’ve chosen (i.e., the relation of sisterhood), although it still requires a change in one of its terms (i.e., in the x), is, I must say, rather tendentious. A closer analogue to what’s involved in the kind of relation that comes to be as a result God’s creative act would the relation of fatherhood. That is, the relation of fatherhood comes to subsist in a potential father after he has generated his offspring. Once he has done so, he has actualized his potential for being a father and is actually now a father. There’s clearly a change here. Just in the same way, your view entails that God undergoes change - even the more so because His essence is identical with His attributes - when He exercises His creative act. The basis of the relation of fatherhood is the generative act of the father; the basis of the relation of God to His creation is the creative act of the Creator. In both cases, something i.e., a relation, comes to subsist i.e., in becoming actualized, in the subjects of both relations i.e., the father in the first and God in the second.
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But I hold this to be a mental construct (ar. iʿtibārī ). Similar for the change of quality in the breast and the change of the applicability of the attributes of action upon God.
Exactly what here is
‘i’tibari? The relation of sisterhood that holds between x and y? Or is it qualitative changes? This will get you into absurdities.
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I blame my use of "conception" for the confusion. It could mean that we cannot intellect God separate from intellecting creation. This is not what I mean. I say "it is inconceivable that" intending to say "it is impossible that" or "it is absurd that". I understand an Eternalist believes the idea "God exists and there is no creation" to be absurd and impossible.
Yes, what would be more accurate to say is not ‘conceptualize’ (
tasawwur) but ‘make the judgment’ (
tasdiq) i.e., the
proposition ‘God exists and there is creation does not’ is false and absurd.
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Thus, "God" can be said to be the necessary being if and only if a certain "other-than-God" is said to exist simultaneous to God. (otherwise, the notion of God existing would be impossible)
This results in the conclusion that God's is necessary not just from itself but from the existence of another, for without that other it could not be said to exist - it would be absurd and impossible.
No. To say ‘it is impossible that God should exist without His effect also existing’ does not imply, as your objection suggests that it does, He is necessary only through another – which is another way of saying ‘He
causally exists thorough another’. For the question of what is and is not necessary through another is a question of
causal dependency. You agree that causes do not depend for their existence on their effects, even in cases where the two are simultaneous, so it isn’t clear to me what your objection here has going for it. Consider the causal relation between the hand and the stick it moves. The stick’s motion is simultaneous with that of the hand. But it is self-evident that it is the hand that is here the cause, not the stick. The stick moves only insofar as the hand moves it. God’s causal relation to His creation is, I maintain, of this sort. Given that, to then say ‘the hand’s movement depends on that of the stick’s’ is to misunderstood the kind of causality i.e., an essential one, involved between God and His effect.
If you object: the hand can exist or move without the stick moving as, say, when the stick is on the ground. I reply: granted, but then it isn’t acting on its effect, which is precisely what is in question here. That is, it is impossible for the hand exercise its causality on the stick (to move the stick) and its effect not come about (the stick moving). So to say, ‘just as the hand can move or exist without the stick doing so, so can God without His effect’ misses the point. The hand
qua acting on/moving the stick, the stick is necessarily moving. Moreover, God’s existence is identical with His causality; otherwise, you cannot avoid positing change in Him.
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There is no temporal delay between knowledge and will - for that presumes the reality of time.
But if there is no temporal delay, and, as you say, God eternally knows, then He eternally wills – for there is no temporal delay. The upshot is that creation is eternal.
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Rather, the willing is the temporal change.
I’m not sure what this means. If you can clarify, I’d be great.
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Knowledge and will are not identical.
In God? If so, you’ve made Him composite.
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The will is not a change in Him, but a change in the māhiyyāt which He eternally knows.
The act of willing creation, on your view, also entails that it is also a change in the subject of the will and the will itself. The view that creation was temporally originated entails the exercise of a power i.e., the will, after not having exercised it – for again creation was preceded by nonexistence - and this is a change in the will itself.
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God eternally knows that creation begins and progresses and how. He knows its stages. He knows He wills some and does not will some - how then could it be claimed that the two are identical?
Sure, but the some that He knows that He wills He wills eternally. They are identical because if they weren’t, God would be composed and subject to change. He would be composed because He would consists of an essence and this attribute of will which is distinct from Him. Why He would be subject to change I’ve already explained.
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It does not follow from the multiplicity of known things that knowing them is not simple. There is a difference between knowing and imagining.
I'm not talking about imagining, so if the second sentence is supposed to be a proof of the first, it isn’t at all explanatory. Your piece of knowledge of x is distinct from your knowledge of y. Otherwise, to know x would just be to know y. This is especially true regarding possibilities, for they are essentially distinct from each other. Hence, given that God is identical to His knowledge, to locate their basis in His knowledge is to introduce multiplicity into it. What is needed by you is a proof that distinct possibilities are not in fact distinct. As far I can see, that is absurd.