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    Premises 1 and 2 are unclear and admit multiple interpret... — Carmelics
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    Supports→The argument from premises 1, 2, and 5 to statement 6 is either sound but not heretical, or unsound due to invalidity
    Supports→The argument from premises 1–3 to statement 4 is either sound but not heretical, or unsound due to invalidity

    Premises 1 and 2 are unclear and admit multiple interpretations

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    The argument from premises 1, 2, and 5 to statement 6 is either sound but not he...The argument from premises 1–3 to statement 4 is either sound but not heretical,...Under another interpretation the argument is invalid because statement 4 does no...Under another interpretation the argument is invalid because statement 6 does no...

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    Under one interpretation the argument is sound but the conclusion is not heretic...

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    The argument from premises 1 and 2 to conclusion 3 cannot be rejected ...74%Therefore premises 1 and 2, which apparently treat Father and Son as s...70%If the Father and the Son are distinct selves rather than modes, then ...70%The locution 'discernible in two natures' ought to be abandoned in Chr...68%

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    Creedal orthodoxy requires 1–3 and 5, yet 1–3 imply the unorthodox 4, and 1, 2 and 5 imply the unorthodox (and necessarily false) statement 6. So what to do? Lines 1–4 seem perfectly clear, and the inference from 1–3 to 4 seems valid. So too does the inference from 1, 2, and 5 to 6. Why should 6 be thought impossible? The idea is that whatever its precise meaning, “generation” is some sort of causing or originating, something in principle nothing can do to itself. One would expect Leftow, as a o

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