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    If a form is limited by matter, it is finite — Carmelics
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    Home/Divine Attributes
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    Supports→God is not finite

    If a form is limited by matter, it is finite

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    Divine Attributes

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    God is not finiteGod, being simple, is not limited by matter

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    Finitude is not the result of composition (matter limiting form)76%God is not finite75%

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    Nothing can have a form unless it also has an underlying matter.73%
    No finite thing can be transformed into an infinite nature.73%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: duns-scotus
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    Scotus ascribes to Aquinas the following argument for the divine infinity: If a form is limited by matter, it is finite. God, being simple, is not limited by matter. Therefore, God is not finite. This, as Scotus points out, is a fallacious argument. (It’s an instance of denying the antecedent.) But even apart from the fallacy, simplicity is not going to get us infinity. As Scotus puts it: “if an entity is finite or infinite, it is so not by reason of something accidental to itself, but because i

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