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    God's possession of maximal pleasure is sufficient to gro... — Carmelics
    Home/Divine Attributes
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    Supports→God cannot exemplify pain, despite pain being a real property.

    God's possession of maximal pleasure is sufficient to ground the reality found in both pleasure and pain.

    Divine AttributesProblem of Evil
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    Divine AttributesProblem of Evil

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    God cannot exemplify pain, despite pain being a real property.God is maximally perfect and cannot possess imperfections.Pain involves a kind of weakness or imperfection in the one who experiences it.

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    God cannot exemplify pain, despite pain being a real property.77%Some pleasure and pain results from the operation of natural laws rath...74%Perfect power is quite naturally viewed as the maximal degree of power...73%It is conceivable that a being might satisfy (D1) by knowing all truth...73%

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    Although such pain is a “perfection” and thus a real property, for Leibniz, it still involves a kind of weakness or imperfection in the person who has it, and so God cannot, in the end, exemplify this “perfection”. Rather, God’s possession of maximal pleasure is somehow sufficient to ground the “reality” that is found in both pleasure and pain (Leibniz 1677 [1969: 177]). This seems fishy, and other philosophers argue against Leibniz that if pain is a real property (rather than a mere absence), t

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