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    Pain involves a kind of weakness or imperfection in the o... — Carmelics
    Home/Divine Attributes
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    Supports→God cannot exemplify pain, despite pain being a real property.

    Pain involves a kind of weakness or imperfection in the one who experiences it.

    Against an attribute of GodDivine Attributes
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    Divine AttributesAgainst an attribute of God

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    God cannot exemplify pain, despite pain being a real property.God is maximally perfect and cannot possess imperfections.God's possession of maximal pleasure is sufficient to ground the reality found i...

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    Existence is not a further quality or perfection which a being possess...75%God, as a perfect being, cannot be subject to privation or lack.72%Perfect ideas cannot subsist in imperfect intellects or imperfect obje...72%That would place the First Being in potentiality to some perfection no...71%

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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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