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    An aggregate of possible things cannot be self-caused — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    An aggregate of possible things cannot be self-caused

    CausationNatural Theology
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    Natural TheologyCausation

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    A chain of possible things cannot regress infinitely and must terminate in a bei...An infinite regress of possible causes would itself constitute an aggregate of p...Every possible thing requires an external cause that preponderates existence ove...

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    The aggregate of possible things cannot be self-caused100%The aggregate of all contingent things cannot be its own cause, becaus...84%An aggregate of possible things is itself possible in itself84%The aggregate of all contingent things cannot exist without a cause.84%

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    Avicenna divides “actual” beings, as opposed to impossible things, into necessary in itself and possible in itself but necessary through another (Davidson 1987: 292–3; McGinnis 2010: 159–164). The necessary in itself is that which has existence in its essence and an impossibility arises whenever it is assumed not to exist. By contrast, the possible in itself but necessary through another is that which “has no existence in essence” and “no impossibility” arises whether it is assumed to exist or n

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