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    Christ therefore has one particular nature. — Carmelics
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    Supports→Christ should be said to have one complex or combined nature (mía phúsis súnthetos), not two discernible natures.

    Christ therefore has one particular nature.

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    'Particular nature' means the same as 'hypostasis'.Christ is one hypostasis and one person.Christ should be said to have one complex or combined nature (mía phúsis súnthet...That one nature is complex, combining and preserving the properties of divinity ...

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    Therefore Christ can have only one particular nature, not two.85%Christ should be said to have one complex or combined nature (mía phús...78%There must be some kind of distinction between the nature and the haec...78%God's nature is a true and immutable nature77%

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    SEP: philoponus
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    In Arbiter (Arbitrator or Umpire), written about the same time as the Council of Constantinople and surviving only in Syriac translation, Philoponus takes the view that the locution ‘discernible in two natures’ ought to be abandoned. His main strategy is to argue that in this context the meaning of the terms ‘nature’ and ‘hypóstasis’ are essentially identical, so that if Christ is (according to (3)) one hypóstasis he cannot also (as in (4)) be discernible in two natures. The argument goes roughl

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