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    Lover and beloved in a charity of friendship cannot be nu... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The Father and the Son are really distinct and not really the same.

    Lover and beloved in a charity of friendship cannot be numerically identical.

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    Numerical distinctness (non-identity) implies real distinctness.The Father and the Son are really distinct and not really the same.The Father loves the Son.

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    In a charity of friendship, lover and beloved cannot be numerically id...

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    97%
    Divine love is a kind of charity of friendship.80%
    Any account of the Trinity that treats the Persons as numerically iden...73%
    The Father and the Son are numerically distinct (non-identical).72%

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    Divine love doesn’t imply further Persons because it’s the same relational property as divine self-knowing. God-as-knower isn’t numerically the same as God-as-known because of the essential asymmetry of the knowing relation (ibid.). Divine love, Koons says, is a kind of charity of friendship; thus, lover and beloved can’t be numerically identical. So if the Father loves the Son, this implies that they are numerically distinct (non-identical). It also implies that they are really distinct and not really the same. In specifying what he means by real distinctness Koons writes,

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