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    The aggregate is composed entirely of contingent things. — Carmelics
    Home/Natural Theology
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    Supports→The aggregate of all contingent things cannot exist without a cause.

    The aggregate is composed entirely of contingent things.

    Natural Theology
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    Natural Theology

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    2 topics

    Causation1 linkedModality & Possibility1 linked

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.

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    Every contingent thing requires a cause for its existence.If the aggregate required no cause, it would have to exist necessarily, but an a...The aggregate of all contingent things cannot exist without a cause.

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    All contingently existing things are members of the aggregate.90%The necessarily existing thing that causes the aggregate of all contin...89%The aggregate cannot exist necessarily, because all of its constituent...89%If the aggregate required no cause, it would have to exist necessarily...88%

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    Avicenna next considers the aggregate of all the existing contingent individual things, the existence of each of which is accounted for by its causal antecedents. He then proposes and evaluates four options for accounting for the aggregate’s existence. The first is that the existence of the aggregate does not require a cause. However, given the principle that the existence of any contingent thing must have a cause, the aggregate would then have to exist necessarily. But the aggregate’s existing

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