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    If the One is, it must be without parts — Carmelics
    Home/Divine Attributes
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    Supports→The One cannot have parts

    If the One is, it must be without parts

    Modality & Possibility
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    Divine AttributesModality & Possibility

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    1 linked claim · 1 topic

    Against an aspect of God2 linked
    The One cannot have parts

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    If the One had parts, it would be manyThe One cannot be manyThe One cannot have parts

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    The One cannot have parts84%Therefore, bodies cannot have parts.79%Socrates does not suppose that a thing with parts cannot be one in gen...78%Leibnizian substances do not have parts in the requisite sense.77%

    Source

    AI-extracted
    SEP: speusippus
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    The first is an argument from the assumed simplicity of the One. This corresponds to things we can find in Plato. In what is frequently referred to as the ‘first hypothesis’ of Plato’s Parmenides (137c-142a), Parmenides begins (137c) by laying it down that the One cannot be many; he then argues, first (137cd), that if the One is, it must be without parts, since otherwise it would be many. Subsequent argumentation makes this a proscription against all attempts to predicate anything positive of th

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