Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T03:24:53.405Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘There can be only one’: A response to Joseph C. Schmid

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2022

Enric F. Gel*
Affiliation:
Department of Philosophy, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Recently, in response to an article of mine, Joseph C. Schmid has argued that some traditional theistic arguments for God's unicity are problematic in that they presuppose a controversial principle and conflict with Trinitarian theology. In this article, I answer Schmid's concerns. I defend one of the original arguments while advancing new ones, and I vindicate my abductive argument for theism over naturalism.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

In previous articles . . .

Recently, I argued that theism (both in its classical and non-classical forms) enjoys an advantage over Graham Oppy's naturalism as a theory of the First Cause (Gel (Reference Gel2021)).Footnote 1 Given that there are several well-known arguments for the conclusion that there can be only one God, theism is able to give us an answer to how many first causes there are (one) and why (because there can be only one). Oppy's naturalism, on the contrary, leaves both questions hopelessly opened – any number of initial or fundamental physical items we were to pick (3, 44, a trillion, a morbillion . . .)Footnote 2 would appear arbitrary, especially given the fact that there does not seem to be a way to explain why such a number could not have been different, not even by a unit. Indeed, ‘[w]hat about the nature of initial physical items would make it impossible for there to be one more or one less than a given number N?’ (Gel (Reference Gel2021), 4). No answer appears to be forthcoming.

Hence, under theism the number of initial or fundamental entities is explained or made intelligible, whereas under Oppy's naturalism, as it stands, it is not. Whatever the number is, presumably it could not have been different (since, ex hypothesi, we are speaking about a necessary First Cause), but we are left wondering as to why. Theism, then, can do away with a brute fact to which, apparently, Oppy's naturalism is either committed or unable to shave off. Thus, I argued, this can be a reason to prefer theism over Oppy's naturalism, ceteris paribus. (Notice that the force of the argument relies more heavily on the ability to answer the why-part of the question.)

Joseph C. Schmid, though, begs to differ. In a recent article, Schmid (Reference Schmid2022) has argued that this case fails on several counts, mainly because the arguments I presented for God's unicity do not work. As they stand, those arguments (i) presuppose a controversial principle, the Identity of Indiscernibles (IoI), (ii) fail to justify that there could not be any differentiating feature between two Gods and, to make things worse, (iii) actually conflict with Trinitarianism.

Schmid's response is both thoughtful and valuable – it provides opportunity for clarification and further discussion of arguments related to the gap problem, which is slowly gathering attention in the philosophy of religion. However, I don't think Schmid's criticisms succeed. In what follows I attempt to advance the debate by showing, first, that one of my original arguments, with some modifications, does work; second, that Schmid's parody argument against Trinitarianism is invalid; and third, that other arguments can be given without the above controversial principle, strengthening my case. I will also discuss the role this argument can play in the project of worldview comparison.

Defending an argument for God's unicity

God's unicity compromised? IoI

As I explained in my previous article, the classical theist's picture of God is that of a purely actual reality, something which is pure being (esse) itself. From the nature of something which was thus, I wrote, it follows it would have to be unique:

[S]uch a thing could not be multipliable, because it could not be subjected to any differentiating feature, as a genus (animal) is multiplied in its species (human) by the addition of a specific difference (rationality) or a species (human) in its individuals . . . by the addition of matter. There is nothing outside pure being that could act, with respect to it, as a differentiating feature, as the specific difference rationality is outside the genus animal or as matter is outside form, because ‘outside’ pure being there is only non-being, and non-being is nothing. So pure being could not be differentiated, as pure being, into multiple instances of itself . . . Hence, a purely actual reality that was pure being itself . . . would have to be unique. (Gel (Reference Gel2021), 3)Footnote 3

Schmid (Reference Schmid2022, 6) helpfully formalizes said argument thus:

  1. (1) For there to be more than one thing that is pure esse, there would have to be some feature(s) that differentiate(s) each from the other(s).

  2. (2) But nothing that is pure esse could have such a differentiating feature.

  3. (3) So, there cannot be more than one thing that is pure esse. (1, 2)

  4. (4) But whatever is purely actual is pure esse.

  5. (5) So, there cannot be more than one purely actual thing. (3, 4)

Schmid's first complaint is that (1) essentially amounts to the controversial principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles (IoI), which is here just assumed without argument. IoI states that ‘if x is distinct from y, then there is some feature that one has that the other lacks’ (ibid.) – in short, that there cannot be two distinct indiscernible things. Given the controversial nature of IoI, anyone mounting an argument on it should be ready to give some argument for it – Schmid is right in pointing this out.

Now, one way to advance the discussion here would be to forget IoI altogether and put forward other arguments for God's unicity that didn't depend on it – and this I will do below. However, I don't think we need to abandon IoI that quickly. Though a full-blown defence of IoI far exceeds my purposes,Footnote 4 I would like to briefly sketch a reason in its favour, in order to show that the above argument does not stand on intolerably unreasonable ground. And the reason is this: I think that, without IoI, our ontology runs the risk of getting chaotically overcrowded very quickly – or at least the possibility of this should force us to remain agnostic as to the number of ordinary objects we encounter in everyday experience.

For instance, I have one pencil on my desk. But if I allow it is possible that, were I to see one pencil, there are in fact two distinct indiscernible pencils, I'm not sure I can continue to be confident that there is only one pencil on my desk. Consider also that, presumably, if it is possible for there to be two distinct indiscernible objects, it is also possible for there to be three, four, ten, or a million of them. Hence, without IoI or some principle like IoI, we would constantly be in the dark as to how many objects we encounter in everyday experience.Footnote 5

Maybe someone would argue that, even without granting IoI, the rational thing to do is to assume there is only one pencil on my desk – after all, it is rational to assume that things are as they seem to me, and it seems to me that there is only one pencil on my desk. But I don't think this objection works. For, yes, it is rational to assume thus . . . unless I have a reason to think things might not appear to me the way they are. And I think denial of IoI gives us precisely such a reason.

Consider a thought experiment. Mary is kidnapped by a mad philosopher and wakes up in a large room, chained to a wall. In front of her, she sees a nice little pine tree, and so, naturally forms the belief ‘There is a pine tree in front of me.’ But then, the kidnapper informs her that, before constructing the room, he flipped a coin to decide whether to plant one pine tree (heads) or more than one (tails) – with the condition that, were the coin to turn up tails, he would plant the additional trees so perfectly aligned behind the first one that, from Mary's perspective, nobody could tell whether there was more than one tree or not. Assuming Mary trusts her kidnapper (she knows he is a Kantian and would not lie, for instance), it seems to me that the rational thing for her to do in this situation is to remain agnostic as to how many trees there are in the room. For all she knows, there might be only one, sure, but there could also be two, three, four, etc. Mary has now a reason for not taking at face value how things appear to her.Footnote 6

I propose that the one who denies IoI finds himself in a parallel situation. He, like Mary, has a reason for not taking at face value how things appear to him. After all, one pencil will appear to him as only one pencil – but so would two distinct indiscernible pencils (and three, four, five, etc.). As the saying goes, if it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck . . . well, without IoI, maybe it is two ducks.

One could say that we don't need the full-blown principle to avoid these (and other)Footnote 7 undesirable consequences. Maybe it suffices to take IoI as a sort of rule-of-thumb that admits of exceptions, and to restrict these to very rare occasions. Personally, I would want to know why IoI should admit of exceptions, and why these ones and not others. It seems to me that, in the absence of a plausible story as to how contained and limited these exceptions are (and why), the previous sceptical conclusions follow – for we would be in the dark with respect to the situations in which application of IoI is warranted or not. Having said this, I am not entirely opposed to this rule-of-thumb approach. But then, I don't see either why the unicity argument would need more than a rule-of-thumb IoI. Sure, the argument would be stronger with a totally universal principle, but that a weaker one is conceded need not mean the argument is therefore without any merit. In the absence of any reason to think that beings of pure esse are not subject to IoI, the fact that no differentiating feature can be found between them should suffice to reasonably conclude that there can't be more than one.

Finally, it seems to me there is a way to tweak the above unicity argument to make it depend on a principle of identity not of indiscernibles simpliciter, but of necessary indiscernibles (that is, entities which are necessarily indiscernible, indiscernible in every possible world).Footnote 8 This would have the advantage of being truer to premise 2, which states that there could not be any differentiating feature between beings of pure esse. If there is a possible world w where two beings of pure esse are distinguished by a differentiating feature, then one of the two is not a being of pure esse in w. Hence, beings of pure esse are indiscernible across every possible world – they are necessary indiscernibles.Footnote 9 And while there may be some motivation to question the identity of indiscernibles, I can think of no reason to question the identity of necessary indiscernibles.

What about Schmid's objection to IoI? After suggesting that ‘the principal motivation behind IoI seems to be explicability’, for if there are no differentiating features between two distinct objects, ‘their individuation would seem to be primitive or brute’, he writes:

Why can't individuation or distinctness simply be primitive? In that case, there need not be some feature that grounds things' distinction. . . . Indeed, there seems to be a prima facie plausible argument that individuation or distinctness must ultimately be primitive. For we can equally ask: in virtue of what are those individuating features of x and y individuated? If they're not individuated by anything, then we have primitive individuation, which is precisely what IoI sought to avoid. If they have some further differentiating features, then we're off on a vicious regress. For we can further ask, of those features, in virtue of what are they individuated? And so on ad infinitum. It seems, then, that we must ultimately bottom out in primitive individuation. (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 6)

It's not clear to me, though, how this objection is supposed to work. Consider two distinct physical objects, a rectangular object and a circular object. They are differentiated (among other things) by the one having the feature of being rectangular and the other that of being circular (or, if preferred, by the one being rectangular and the other not). Is there any need to appeal to something else in virtue of which the feature ‘being rectangular’ is different from the feature ‘being circular’ (or ‘not being rectangular’)? It doesn't seem so: their difference appears to be self-evident or self-explicative.Footnote 10 Is this something the proponent of IoI seeks to avoid? Not really: what he seeks to avoid is diversity without discernibility. There is no indiscernibility between ‘being rectangular’ and ‘being circular’ (or ‘not being rectangular’), but there would be between two objects that shared all and only all features in common.

Additionally, even if it is true that we must accept primitive (understood in the sense of brute) individuation at some level, it doesn't follow that we need to accept it at all and any levels. In fact, we have just seen that there are compelling reasons against accepting primitive individuation for things or objects ('substances’), to which proponents of IoI usually restrict the principle.Footnote 11 Hence, it seems that a proponent of IoI could concede that we must ultimately bottom out in primitive individuation – only that we had better not have to do it with things or objects. And that's all the above argument for unicity needs.Footnote 12

So, IoI, though certainly controversial and in need of a more in-depth defence, is not without warrant. Having said this, I think Schmid's points can help make the unicity argument more modest, which need not be a bad thing. Insofar as one finds IoI plausible, to that measure one has reason to think that there could only be one being of pure esse – granting that there couldn't be any differentiating feature between two hypothetic beings of pure esse, something to which I now turn.

Distinguishing beings of pure esse

We have now dealt with Schmid's criticisms of (1). But what about premise 2, that there can be no differentiating feature between two hypothetic beings of pure esse? Schmid complains that the justification given for (2) is sketchy at best, since it is unclear what ‘outside’ means in the context of the argument: ‘It certainly can't mean ‘distinct from’, since there most definitely are things distinct from pure being. But if it doesn't mean distinction, I struggle to see what it could mean’ (ibid., 7). This is fair enough,Footnote 13 and I think a better and more straightforward justification for (2) can be given, following Edward Feser (Reference Feser2017, 121–122).

Under classical theism, God just is pure being itself – Aquinas's Ipsum Esse Subsistens. But if there were two Gods, two beings of pure esse, they would have to be distinguished by some differentiating feature (premise 1). However, if pure being A was distinguished from pure being B by having a feature F which B lacked, it would cease to be true that A just is pure being itself – instead, A would be being plus feature F. Add anything to A in order to distinguish it from B – A stops being something which just is pure being itself. Alternatively, being pure esse, both A and B are supposed to possess the fullness of being. But if A possesses a feature F which B lacks, then either A has the fullness of being and something else, which doesn't make sense, or B does not possess the fullness of being, in lacking F. Either way, one of the two stops being pure esse.

Consider further that feature F would have to be either an essential property of A (something which flowed from A's nature) or an accidental property A could have or not. But F could not be an essential property of A, since in such a case B would exhibit F as well. A and B, after all, are supposed to be two distinct beings with a shared nature, that of something which just is existence itself – otherwise, it is not the God of classical theism which we are multiplying. Hence, if F flowed from A's essence, it would also flow from B's essence. But neither could F be an accidental property of A, for then A would stop being something which just is existence itself, as was said above. So, nothing that was pure esse could have a feature that differentiated it from another being of pure esse. Thus, now (2) seems to be justified and we are in a better position to deal with Schmid's other objections.

Schmid's second complaint against premise 2 is that there seem to be plausible candidates for features that differentiate among beings of pure esse. He writes,

Consider, first, that most Thomistic classical theists think that being pure esse is compatible with being Trinitarian (i.e. existing as three persons). But if that's so, surely being pure esse is also compatible with being (say) Unitarian (i.e. existing as one person). It is not as though Jews and Muslims are prevented from affirming the traditional [Doctrine of Divine Simplicity] (and, with it, God's being identical to his existence) by dint of their Unitarianism. It would also seem intolerably ad hoc and inexplicable if Trinitarianism but not Unitarianism (or Binitarianism, or etc.) was compatible with God's being pure esse. If all this is correct, then we have on our hands a clear candidate for a differentiating feature among purely actual beings of pure esse: the number of persons in which they exist. In principle, one being of pure esse could be Unitarian; another could be Binitarian; still another could be Trinitarian; and so on. (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 7)

Admittedly, Schmid does not claim that these are ‘genuine metaphysical possibilities’, only that ‘the argument that there cannot in principle be something that differentiates beings of pure esse fails’ (ibid.). The idea seems to be that it is the theist who has the onus to prove that the number of persons can't be a differentiating feature between beings of pure esse – say, because it is not metaphysically possible that said number be different. Until then, the number of persons could be, ‘in principle’, such a differentiating feature.

Now, this is a fair criticism given the original unclear presentation of the argument. But given how I have just defended premise 2, it should be clear what is wrong with it. For the justification offered for (2) is completely general – the point is that any feature F which pure being A had and pure being B lacked would imply that A (or B) was not, after all, a being of pure esse, contrary to hypothesis. Hence, whatever the number of persons in the Godhead is, such a feature (if we can speak this way) will have to follow necessarily from God's nature as pure esse and not be something which could vary from one being of pure esse to another. And this, after all, is what almost every classical theist participant in this debate will claim. Also, it need not be ad hoc nor inexplicable – Unitarians will typically claim that it is impossible for there to be more than one person in the Godhead (Trinitarianism being incompatible, for instance, with absolute divine simplicity); Trinitarians, that it is metaphysically necessary for God to be three persons.Footnote 14 (I know of no Binitarian, or etc.). This prevents no-one (Jew, Christian, or Muslim) from affirming the key tenets of classical theism – it just means that one party in the debate is mistaken about what is or is not compatible with God's being pure esse.

Let's now address Schmid's last objection to premise 2. Schmid asks us to consider

the distinction between being identical to one's own act of existence and being identical to existence simpliciter or existence as such. Thomistic metaphysics already admits that there are (roughly speaking) different acts of existence. My act of existence, for instance, is not the same as God's act of existence . . . God, then, is identical not to the existence of you or me or trees; he is identical to his own act of existence. But in that case, it's not clear why there cannot be two things which are identical to their acts of existence. They could presumably each be identical to their own respective acts of existence, which are different from one another. (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 7)Footnote 15

I don't think, though, that this will work. In Thomistic metaphysics, my act of existence is different from yours (or from Fido's) because I am different from you (or from Fido). It is not, so to speak, that there is something in my act of existence that makes it different from yours or Fido's act of existence, but that our acts of existence are rendered different because they actualize something other – namely, different substances or essences (Wippel (Reference Wippel2000), 151–152, 187–190), taking ‘essence’ technically as ‘the matter-form composite itself’ (Kerr (Reference Kerr2015), 41).

But now take a being A whose essence is identical to its act of existence. What is the ‘content’ of A's essence? What does A's essence consist in? Simply, A's essence is to be, A's essence just is existence. What this means is that, pace Schmid, there is no real distinction between being identical to one's own act of existence and being identical to existence simpliciter or existence as such. And hence, to ask whether there could be two beings, A and B, each of which was identical to its own act of existence is not really anything different from asking whether there could be two beings, A and B, who just were existence or being itself. And we have already argued that this cannot be the case. Hence this last objection fails as well.

Trinitarian trouble?

I have now given a clearer defence of premise 2 and shown why Schmid's defeaters fail. Assuming (1) is true, does the Trinitarian need to worry? Schmid thinks yes. For anyone who accepts the above argument for God's unicity, he argues, should also accept the following parody argument against Trinitarianism (ibid.):

  1. (6) For there to be more than one divine person that is pure esse, there would have to be some feature that differentiates each from the other(s).

  2. (7) But nothing that is pure esse could have such a differentiating feature.

  3. (8) So, there cannot be more than one divine person that is pure esse. (6, 7)

  4. (9) Anything divine is pure esse. (Classical theism)

  5. (10) Any divine person is divine.

  6. (11) So, any divine person is pure esse. (9, 10)

  7. (12) So, there cannot be more than one divine person. (8, 11)

Of course, if a sound argument for God's unicity is incompatible with Trinitarianism, so much the worse for the Trinitarian! That need not affect my overall case that theism has an advantage over Oppy's naturalism – and to be fair, Schmid is not claiming that it should. But does the Trinitarian really need to worry? I don't think so. For Schmid's parody argument, I contend, is invalid under a traditional account of the Trinity – one which Christian classical theists will often espouse. And hence, acceptance of the unicity argument does not force acceptance of Schmid's parody argument.

To see why, let's get clear on some background claims. The doctrine of the Trinity states that there is only one God who is three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Under the traditional account of the Trinity I want to present, the three divine persons are subsistent relations within the Godhead, so that each of the persons is identical to one and the same God but really distinct from the other persons.Footnote 16 The Father is God, the Son is God, the Spirit is God – but the Father is not the Son nor the Spirit, the Son is not the Father nor the Spirit and the Spirit is not the Father nor the Son. This usually invites the retort that, if each person is truly identical to one and the same God, then it follows that they should all be identical between themselves, which conflicts with Trinitarianism (see Cartwright (Reference Cartwright1987)).

One common solution to this problem that will help us advance our purposes here consists in pointing out that the objection equivocates on two distinct notions of identity – identity in being and identity in person.Footnote 17 For the premises to be true to Trinitarianism, they must be understood in the first sense of identity (both the Father and the Son are identical in being to the one and only God), but for the conclusion to conflict with Trinitarianism, it must be understood in the second (the Father being the same identical person as the Son). But such a conclusion simply does not follow from the premises as understood above – all that follows from them is that the Father is identical to the Son in being, which is precisely what traditional Trinitarianism claims! The divine persons are the same one being, but they are distinct persons/subsistent relations within the same one being. In the words of Gilles Emery,

The Son is ‘an other’ (alius) from the Father, but he is not ‘something else’, and the Holy Spirit is ‘an other’ from the Father and the Son without being ‘something else’ than the Father and the Son are. . . . The alterity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit is . . . an alterity of persons based on a relation-distinction, but not an alterity of essence, nature, or substance. (Emery (Reference Emery2007), 133)Footnote 18

Now, the Father, Son, and Spirit being identical in being, each of them simply is the one same God. How is it, then, that the three persons are distinguished from one another? By way of what's called their relations of origin – the Father is the unoriginated origin, the Son is generated from the Father, and the Spirit proceeds ('spirates’, in technical terminology) from the Father and the Son.Footnote 19 And hence, ‘[e]ach [divine] person has a unique proper characteristic’ (Pawl (Reference Pawl2020), 106) that grounds their distinction – paternity for the Father, filiation for the Son, and spiration for the Spirit. The Father is not the Son nor the Spirit, for he proceeds from no-one and is the origin of the Son and the Spirit; the Son is not the Father nor the Spirit for he is generated from the Father and contributes to the procession of the Spirit, and so on (Leftow (Reference Leftow2004), 315; Pawl (Reference Pawl2020), 105). Thus, the divine persons are subsistent relations in God that are distinguished because of their mutual or relative opposition – that is, because they do not relate to each other in the same way. Each one is the one God (each one has the one and only divine nature), but in a distinct relational way: the Son has the same divine nature of the Father, but in a filial way, as one who receives it from the Father; etc. (White (Reference White2022a), 445–447).

Now, what this all amounts to is to the claim that the one and only being or substance which is God admits of ad intra differentiation or distinction by way of internal immanent processions – that the one and only divine nature subsists in three personal modes which are relationally distinct according to an order of derivation (White (Reference White2022a), 409–424). And this is what will allow us to see the equivocation in Schmid's parody argument. For now we can distinguish, for lack of a better terminology, between ad intra differentiation and ad extra differentiation.Footnote 20 While the argument for God's unicity denies the possibility of any ad extra differentiating feature between two distinct beings of pure esse, it remains silent about the possibility of ad intra differentiation between subsistent relations or persons within the same one being of pure esse. For all the argument is committed to, this may or may not be possible. So, with this in mind, let's recover the first half of Schmid's parody argument:

(6) For there to be more than one divine person that is pure esse, there would have to be some feature that differentiates each from the other(s).

(7) But nothing that is pure esse could have such a differentiating feature.

(8) So, there cannot be more than one divine person that is pure esse.

Now, the conclusion is somewhat ambiguous and admits of two possible readings. For (8) to really conflict with Trinitarianism, it must be interpreted as

(8a) There cannot be more than one divine person that is the same one being of pure esse.

If, instead, we were to interpret it as

(8b) There cannot be more than one divine person that is, each, a different being of pure esse,

this will certainly make Tritheists object, but no traditional Trinitarian will complain. So, for this really to constitute an argument against Trinitarianism, (6) and (7) must establish (8a). But the same ambiguity is present in the way Schmid phrases the premises. For, again, (6) can be understood either as

(6a) For there to be more than one divine person that is the same one being of pure esse, there would have to be some feature that differentiates each from the other(s),

in which case it will be true for the Trinitarian (understanding the idea of a differentiating feature in a broad enough sense), for it refers to the ad intra differentiation that takes place within the Godhead, due to the distinct relations of origin between the divine persons.Footnote 21 Or we can understand (6) as

(6b) For there to be more than one divine person that is, each, a different being of pure esse, there would have to be some feature that differentiates each from the other(s),

in which case it is also true, but not what the traditional Trinitarian has in mind when saying that there is a Trinity of divine persons. Likewise, (7) can be understood either as

(7a) Nothing that is a being of pure esse can have a feature that distinguished it from another that was the same one being of pure esse (for short: Nothing that is pure esse can admit of ad intra differentiation),

in which case such a premise is nowhere to be found in the unicity argument, explicit or implicit. Or we can understand (7) as

(7b) Nothing that is a being of pure esse can have a feature that distinguished it from another being of pure esse (for short: Nothing that is pure esse can admit of ad extra differentiation),

in which case it is true and part of the unicity argument. But then, we find that there is in Schmid's argument an equivocation that makes the inference to (8a) invalid – an equivocation, precisely, between the ad intra differentiation of the persons within the same one being of pure esse and the ad extra differentiation between two hypothetical beings of pure esse. For (6) to be true to Trinitarianism, it must be understood in the sense of ad intra differentiation, as (6a) – but for (7) to be true to the unicity argument, it must be understood in the sense of ad extra differentiation, as (7b). Hence, if we are speaking of ad intra differentiation, then (6) is true but (7) is false or unjustified, and (8a) does not follow.Footnote 22 And if we are speaking of ad extra differentiation, both (6) and (7) are true, but (8a) still does not follow – what follows is (8b), something which no traditional Trinitarian denies.

At this point, could someone claim the problem to be that any justification for (7b) will inevitably carry over to (7a), creating a bridge between the unicity argument and the parody argument? Might one say, for instance, that if the Son has his proper characteristic (filiation) in distinction to the Father, then the Son can't be the same being of pure esse as the Father, but being plus filiation? Not really, not without misconstruing traditional Trinitarianism altogether. For the idea is that each person's proper characteristic is not something extra that gets ‘added on’ to the person or to the divine nature, like an accident to a substance. Given divine simplicity, there are no accidents in God and everything that is in God is God's own substance. And so, the persons are relative in all that they are, that is, the Father just is his paternity, the Son just is his filiation, and paternity and filiation just are, in turn, the one divine nature, despite being relationally distinct from one another (White (Reference White2022a), 431–434 and 448–449).Footnote 23 Thus, the argument for unicity defended above is not incompatible with a traditional account of the Trinity. Traditional Trinitarians need not worry about Schmid's parody argument.

More arguments for God's unicity but no more ‘IoI-ing’

I have now defended one of the unicity arguments from Schmid's objections. However, the controversial nature of IoI haunts it, and so it would be nice to my overall case if there were other arguments for God's unicity that did not depend upon IoI and that could appeal to someone who denied it. Are there any such arguments? I will explore two.Footnote 24

From simplicity to unicity

In Summa Theologiae, I, q. 11, a. 3, Aquinas gives three arguments to the effect that God is one. Our interest here is in the first one, an argument from simplicity. According to classical theism, God is absolutely simple, composed of no parts whatsoever. There is in God no composition of essence and existence, form and matter, substance and accidents and, for our purposes now, nature and subject, essence and individual. This means that God is identical to his Deity – or as Schmid himself puts it, ‘God is God's essence’ (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 1). But then, reasons Aquinas, there can be only one God. Why? Because, in God, that which makes him God is identical to that which makes him this God. Deity, then, can't be shared between multiple individuals, as humanity can – whatever is God (whatever has Deity) will, by that same token, be this God, the same one God.Footnote 25

Consider for comparison that if Socrates was identical to humanity, there could only be one human being – Socrates. If Socrates is identical to humanity and Plato is not the same being as Socrates, then it follows that Plato can't be human. Likewise, if this God is identical to Deity and X is not the same being as this God, it also follows that X can't be divine.Footnote 26 Again, given divine simplicity, only that which is identical to this God can be divine. In other words, Deity is hacceity, and hence, when it comes to God, ‘There can be only one.’

Note how this argument does not depend on the truth of IoI. Even if there could be, in general, two distinct indiscernible objects, the point is that, in God's case, we could be certain that such a thing could not take place. There could not be two distinct indiscernible Gods, nor two distinct discernible ones, because given divine simplicity Deity is not an essence that can be shared by multiple individual substances. Hence, whatever is distinct from this God will be anything except another God.

From perfection to unicity

The second argument follows Brian Leftow (Reference Leftow2012) and goes from perfection to unicity. In doing so it will have the advantage of being neutral between classical and non-classical theism.Footnote 27 The crux of the argument is that, plausibly, unicity is a perfection, or else follows from something which, also plausibly, is a perfection. And so, a perfect being (God) would have to be unique. Apart from direct intuition that unicity is a perfection, there are several indirect paths we could take to arrive at the same conclusion.

First, consider that F is a perfection if it is ‘objectively and intrinsically such that something F is more worthy of respect, admiration, honor, or awe than something not F, ceteris paribus’ (Leftow (Reference Leftow2012), 178). But it seems that something unique is more worthy of respect, admiration, honour, or awe than something not unique. Hence, being unique seems to be a perfection. But there does not appear to be any incompatibility with being unique and other properties a perfect being ought to have. Hence, we can say that, plausibly, a perfect being would be unique.

Consider now that a perfect being would plausibly possess supreme or absolute value. But something is more valuable in the same measure as it is more unique – or at least that seems reasonable enough and congruent with how we measure value. Hence, a perfect being would plausibly be unique.

Consider also that it seems to follow from the notion of a perfect being that it could not have a superior, that nothing could be greater in perfection than it. But there is also a case to be made that ‘there cannot be something wholly distinct from [God] and as great as He is’ (Reference Leftowibid., 207) – that is, that a perfect being could not have an equal. Indeed, it seems greater to be unmatched in perfection than not to be. As Leftow puts it, ‘[i]t would be greater to be intrinsically such as to be the greatest possible being among commensurable rivals than not to be. No constellation of attributes could confer more perfection than one that made one thus greatest’ (ibid.). Hence, it seems to follow once more that a perfect being would plausibly be unique – it would have no superior and no equal.

Finally, consider what Leftow calls the GSA-property (short for ‘God, Source of All’): x has the GSA-property if, for any concrete substance wholly distinct from x, x and only x makes ‘the creating-ex-nihilo sort of causal contribution’ to its continued existence (Reference Leftowibid., 21). As Leftow argues, the GSA-property is either a perfection or a constituent of other perfections. Why think this? First, consider that ‘[b]eing a potential ultimate source of some proportion of what benefits things is a good property to have’ (Reference Leftowibid., 22). But being the ultimate source of all that benefits things would be the maximal degree of this good property, and hence, given that ‘a property is a perfection iff it is the maximal degree of a degreed good attribute to have’ (Reference Leftowibid.), being the ultimate source of all that benefits things is a perfection. Now, such a perfection supervenes on the GSA-property – and so, either the GSA-property, by a plausible supervenience principle, is itself a perfection or it is a necessary condition of a perfection. In either case, a perfect-being will have the GSA-property.

Consider also that the GSA-property, together with the ability to freely exercise one's own power, constitutes the property of having complete control over all other concrete objects. But ‘[i]t is good to have power over other things’ existence . . . Power over existence is degreed. Complete power over all other concrete things' existence is its maximum, and so plausibly a perfection’ (Reference Leftowibid.). In this case, the GSA-property is a constituent of another perfection, and so a perfect being would have the GSA-property.

But it seems clear that there could only be one being which had the GSA-property. For suppose there are two distinct gods, Alpha and Omega, which both have the GSA-property. Because of that, Alpha and Omega would simultaneously be causally dependent on each other, which is viciously circular – Alpha will be creating Omega only insofar as Omega will be creating Alpha, but Omega will be creating Alpha only insofar as Alpha will be creating Omega. So, at most only one thing can have the GSA-property (Reference Leftowibid., 192–193). But if a perfect being would plausibly have the GSA-property, it follows that there could only be one perfect being.

Again, none of these arguments from perfection to unicity relies on IoI. Even if IoI is false and we can have two distinct indiscernible beings, we still could not have two distinct perfect beings, indiscernible or not, for the reasons given. Sure, the arguments are far from being apodictic proofs. As Leftow himself acknowledges (Reference Leftowibid. 12), perfect-being arguments rely on intuitions about perfections, and our intuitions are fallible. Because of this I have explored several routes to support the same conclusion (and maybe more could be added), so that the argument has more force. Even so, modesty in argumentation need not be a bad thing. Insofar as someone finds these intuitions plausible, to that measure he has reason to think that there could not be more than one perfect being.

Does this reasoning conflict with Trinitarianism? If unicity is a perfection that any perfect being ought to have, some will say, then for a divine person to really be divine (and hence, perfect) it would also have to be unique. And so, the same intuitions would support the conclusion that there can only be one divine person. But at least the traditional account of the Trinity presented above can easily deal with this objection. The ad intra differentiation that takes place within God does not make it so that now we have more than one perfect being, and each divine person is still perfect in being identical to one and the same perfect substance, God. Also, further considerations about perfection could support the case that the one and only perfect being should be, internally speaking, more than one person (see, again, Sijuwade (Reference Sijuwade2021)).

Can these arguments be of use to the naturalist?

Let's recapitulate. In my original article I argued that theism has an advantage over Oppy's naturalism as a theory of the First Cause because theism can answer how many first causes or fundamental entities there are and why. This throws additional light onto the First Cause, shaving off one brute fact to which Oppy's naturalism, as it stands, seems committed or unable to eliminate. Adopting the theist's hypothesis for a First Cause, we get to understand something that, adopting Oppy's, seems condemned to remain unintelligible. And this, ceteris paribus, is a point in favour of theism vis-à-vis Oppy's naturalism.

I have now defended one of my original arguments from Schmid's objections and put forward two more that do not depend on the controversial IoI. It seems to me, then, that the whole case is strengthened and poses a challenge to the naturalist. Can the naturalist appropriate the theist's unicity arguments and adapt them to a naturalistic First Cause? I briefly considered this question in my previous article (Gel (Reference Gel2021), 6 and 8), but it is worth pondering it once more.

I think the answer is clearly ‘No’ with respect to the arguments that go from perfection to unicity. Surely, to accept that the First Cause is a perfect being would be to abandon naturalism, at least in any relevant sense of the word. Could the naturalist borrow from the other arguments, and say, for instance, that the First Cause is absolutely simple, purely actual, or pure esse but still a natural reality? Here, I want to say that it depends – it depends on whether the rest of the divine attributes follow from the nature of something which was so. Classical theists, old and new, typically claim that they do.Footnote 28 However, further discussion is needed, given that 2nd-stage arguments (as they are sometimes called) tend to be ignored by those who do not concede the 1st-stage ones.

Anyhow, I want to address some remarks of Schmid that are relevant here. In his article, Schmid takes issue with my suggestion that a purely actual reality would have to be immaterial. Schmid claims that it is not at all clear that every material thing is both mutable and potential in many ways. He writes:

Consider atemporal wavefunction monism. According to this view, there exists a fundamental, physical, non-spatiotemporal entity: the universal wavefunction. This is a perfectly respectable view that has seen a blossoming of interest in philosophy of physics. If we understand ‘material’ and ‘physical’ to be synonymous, then it simply follows that there are perfectly respectable views on which there is a fundamental or foundational, unchangeable, timeless, material thing. We can also suppose that (a) the fundamental layer of reality is necessary (as Gel himself supposes in his second argumentative path) and (b) the fundamental layer of reality is cross-world invariant. From all of this it simply follows that the fundamental atemporal wavefunction has no potencies for change, cross-world variance, or non-existence. We therefore seem to have a perfectly respectable naturalist view on which the foundation of reality is a material, unchangeable, purely actual thing. (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 9–10)

Surely, atemporal wavefunction monism is an interesting view in its own right. Still, as a hypothetical example of a purely actual material thing, in the Aristotelian-Thomistic sense of ‘material’ with which I was operating, it is bound to be incoherent. For a material thing, in Aristotelian-Thomistic philosophy, is that which has matter, and matter is that which persists through substantial change and is thus characterized as pure potentiality to receive any form (Feser (Reference Feser2019), 28–29). A purely actual material thing, then, in this sense of ‘material’, makes no sense – it would have to be something which lacked all potentiality and still was potential in some way.

Schmid's point here turns on the key phrase ‘If we understand “material” and “physical” to be synonymous’, but if this move allows for there to be a purely actual material thing, then Schmid needs to tell us what ‘physical’ means in this context and how it is opposed to ‘immaterial’ in the Aristotelian sense. For if it is not so opposed, we would simply be changing the subject, not speaking of material in the Aristotelian sense, but in another sense, material*. But then, a purely actual thing could both be necessarily immaterial in the Aristotelian sense and maybe also material in the material* sense. That does nothing to invalidate the classical theist's inference to the immateriality of the First Cause – it is no more proof that there could be a purely actual material thing than saying that if we understand ‘round’ as synonymous with ‘red’, then there could be a round square.

Is this advantage worth the price?

Schmid argues repeatedly in his article that, even if classical theism has a simpler account of the First Cause than naturalism, naturalism is simpler tout court, when both are compared as overall theories, and that it is this that should primarily concern us when assessing theories according to their simplicity (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 4).

I have my doubts that this is entirely correct, but let's concede it for the sake of argument.Footnote 29 Let's assume also that I am right and there are sound unicity arguments such as those I have defended. Now, is the theoretical advantage of theism identified here worth the price of theism's added complexity? It is not easy to say – there is no straightforward equation when comparing gains in explanation and costs in simplicity. But it is important to remember that the advantage we have been discussing can be taken as ‘an additional or supplementary reason to be weighted jointly with any other available evidence’ (Gel (Reference Gel2021), 8). Maybe this advantage, on its own, does little to tip the scales in favour of theism, but it can still play an interesting role in a more overarching cumulative case that ends up doing just that.

Consider, for instance, that perfect-being theism can explain all or mostly all properties ascribed to God by appealing to just one basic property – perfection. If the traditional arguments for deducing the divine attributes are correct, classical theism can do so too. But there is nothing comparable in naturalism, and no expectation that there will be (Leftow (Reference Leftow2017), 330–332). That a being is perfect, or purely actual, or pure esse, also seems to make sense of why it is necessary (see, for instance, Byerly (Reference Byerly2019)). But in naturalism, and especially in Oppy's naturalism, the fundamental natural entities are necessary and that's it, full-stop (see Oppy and Pearce (Reference Oppy and Pearce2022), 113). Putting all of this together, it seems that theism could have the tools to explain the number of what is most fundamental, its nature and its necessity – and so, less and less is brute at the fundamental level in theism. Someone could add considerations from fine-tuning, beauty, and other arguments and the scales may begin to tip for him as more and more advantages in explanation are gained for the same price of some extra-ontology. And that seems to me a pretty good deal.

In conclusion

In my previous article, I argued that theism has an advantage over Oppy's naturalism in that theism can answer the double question of how many first causes there are and why, while Oppy's naturalism seems lost on both fronts. In this article, I have defended one of my original arguments for God's unicity from Schmid's objections and offered two more that don't rely on the controversial IoI principle, thereby strengthening my overall case. In addition, I have discussed whether the naturalist could appropriate the theist's first cause while remaining a naturalist and concluded that the prospects of such a move appear slim, though more work needs to be done on this front. Finally, I have considered the role this argument can play in a more overarching cumulative case for theism.

While I have been critical of Schmid's arguments, I think he provided an engaging response and much needed push-back. His objections have allowed us to go a step further than before – clarifying one of my original arguments, showing how it is no threat to the Trinitarian, and exploring additional arguments for God's unicity. If this article advances the discussion in any degree, as I hope it does, it is indeed to Schmid's credit.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank John DeRosa, Pat Flynn, Lucas Prieto, Dante Urbina, Kyle Hodge, and an anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments on an earlier draft of this article. I also benefitted from being invited by Agustín Echavarría to present my previous article as a paper to the Research Group on Philosophical Theology, at the University of Navarre, where I was able to discuss some of the ideas I had for this response. I also want to thank Joseph C. Schmid for his kind and thoughtful interaction with my argument.

Conflict of interest

None.

Footnotes

1. In my original article, I tested how the argument could go on two different paths, one in which causal finitism is granted and another in which a foundational layer of reality is granted. For simplicity's sake, throughout the article I will speak only of ‘the First Cause’, but this should be understood as referring either to a First Cause in the distant past-history of things or to a necessary Foundation that grounds the existence of everything else. Although at the time of writing said article I wasn't aware of this, a similar argument to mine was mentioned in passing in Leftow (Reference Leftow2017), 329–330.

2. Morbillion: the number of tickets sold by Morbius, which is (I'm told) one of the movies ever made.

3. I gave, throughout my article, three more arguments for God's unicity – from simplicity, omnipotence, and absolute perfection. Schmid's treatment of these arguments is also interesting and valuable but to keep things focused I will not engage with it on this occasion. Readers are advised to evaluate whether the responses I will lay out here can be used to vindicate these other arguments.

4. For some particularly strong ones, see Vaught (Reference Vaught1968), Bahlul (Reference Bahlul1988), and Della Rocca (Reference Della Rocca2005).

5. One may even be able to argue for a stronger conclusion – that, without IoI, I should be almost certain that there is more than one pencil where I only see one, to Ockham's despair. And this because there is only one way for there to be only one pencil, but infinite ways for there to be more than one pencil – there could be two distinct indiscernible pencils, three, four, five . . . But the more modest conclusion suffices for my purposes.

6. The mad philosopher rejoices in mad philosophiness, for he is also a Cartesian and enjoys instilling doubt in people.

7. Bahlul comments that denial of IoI leaves us a deeply divided world where ‘the possibilities of interaction are severely limited by the fact that no asymmetric action can take place between indiscernible doubles’ (Bahlul (Reference Bahlul1988), 413).

8. See, for instance, Cross (Reference Cross2011). Such a principle will be immune to many purported counterexamples to IoI, such as that of Adams (Reference Adams1979), which turn on two distinct indiscernible objects being possibly discernible (discernible in some possible world).

9. This would be reinforced if we brought to the table other commitments of classical theism, such as God's immutability and trans-world invariance, which classical theists argue follow from God being pure esse.

10. I owe this example to Pat Flynn.

11. Leibniz himself famously did so (Leibniz (Reference Leibniz2020), 14). One could not be faulted if tempted to abbreviate this Leibnizianly restricted principle as IoIlz.

12. To bring the point home. Even if, ultimately, we must bottom out at primitive individuation, surely the less we have of it, the better. And that's what IoI affords us: to shave off primitive individuation when it comes to objects, which can be distinguished according to their respective properties or features. He who rejects IoI will have to deal with the same primitive individuation as the proponent of IoI and more at the level of objects.

13. I was mainly relying on Gaven Kerr's presentation of the De Ente argument (see Kerr (Reference Kerr2015)), but Kerr's formulation is more attentive than the one I gave. Where I said that ‘outside’ pure being there is only non-being, Kerr is careful to qualify that ‘whatever is distinct from esse tantum is either (i) subject to esse tantum or (ii) nothing’ (ibid., 152–153).

14. For a very interesting and innovative argument to this conclusion, see Sijuwade (Reference Sijuwade2021). Aquinas's use of the psychological analogy also is aimed at supporting the intelligibility of the Trinity – see Summa Theologiae, I, q. 30, a. 2; Compendium Theologiae, I, qq. 40–46; and also White (Reference White2022a), 409–424 and Emery (Reference Emery2007), 130–131. If one still wants to maintain that this would be ad hoc, the Trinitarian could concede so but claim it is not ‘intolerably’ ad hoc but justified in light of the authority of his religious tradition (see Tweedt (Reference Tweedt2022), 8).

15. I omit Schmid's additional suggestion that these acts of existence ‘could presumably be primitively distinct’ (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 7) because that trades on his objections to IoI, with which I have already dealt.

16. See, for instance, Aquinas's treatment of the Trinity in Summa Theologiae, I, qq. 27–43, excellently explored in White (Reference White2022a). For a contemporary relational account of the Trinity, see Koons (Reference Koons2018). Also, for the compatibility of this understanding of the Trinity and divine simplicity, see White (Reference White2016a), (Reference White2016b), (Reference White, Stump and White2022b) and Dolezal (Reference Dolezal2014).

17. I am not necessarily endorsing this solution to the Logical Problem of the Trinity, but merely using it as an entry point into the doctrine. See Pawl (Reference Pawl2020) for an illuminating discussion of the problem and some proposed solutions. Be that as it may, all that matters for our purposes now is just the following: that traditional Trinitarianism affirms that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are one in being (the same one being or substance) and three in person (three distinct persons).

18. Also, ‘[r]elative opposition as to origin makes the relations [i.e., the persons] really distinct from one another, but each of them is really identical to the single divine essence or substance’ (Emery (Reference Emery2007), 145). As Gregory of Nazianzus put it: ‘[N]either is the Son Father, for the Father is One, but He is what the Father is; nor is the Spirit Son, . . . but He is what the Son is’ (quoted in White (Reference White2022a), 146; my italics).

19. Or whatever the distinct mode of procession for the Spirit is – we need not settle the filioque controversy here.

20. I will speak of ad intra and ad extra ‘differentiation’ to maintain uniformity with the expression ‘differentiating feature’, which I have been using throughout, following my original article and Schmid's response. But I shall make mine Aquinas's (nitpicky?) caveat, that when speaking specifically of differentiation between the divine persons (that is, of ad intra differentiation), ‘differentiation’ should be understood simply as ‘distinction’, to avoid the connotation of a diversity of substance (which the Trinitarian denies between the divine persons). See Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I, q. 31, a. 2 and Emery (Reference Emery2007), 134–135.

21. Alternatively, maybe the Trinitarian would want to deny the use of the expression ‘differentiating feature’ in the context of the distinction between the divine persons. In that case, the Trinitarian would consider (6a) to be false and deny application of IoI to the divine persons, on the basis that IoI should be restricted to substances and that the distinction of divine persons is not a distinction between different substances. Still, given that the divine persons are distinguished because of some difference or distinction in their relations of origin, the Trinitarian could endorse a Stronger IoI, such that for any distinct x and y (substances or not), there is in principle some intelligible difference between x and y. I owe this point to John DeRosa.

22. Or (6) is false and (7) is true, if we follow the alternative path on note 21.

23. I thank Pat Flynn for discussing this point with me. Sure, someone might think this account of the Trinity is problematic for independent reasons, but that is not what is at issue here. Instead, what is at issue is whether this traditional account of the Trinity is compatible with the reasoning present in the unicity argument, and that I claim is the case, for the reasons given. Also, could someone try a reverse bridge, from not-(7a) to not-(7b)? If relations of origin allow for the Father and the Son to be distinct and, still, the same one being of pure esse, maybe relations of origin between two different beings of pure esse, A and B, would also allow for them to be distinct and, still, each a being of pure esse. But this won't work either, for this kind of ad extra origination would just be creation (A creating B, for instance), and no being of pure esse can be created.

24. I think more could be added. According to Gaven Kerr (personal correspondence), neither Aquinas's De Ente argument for pure esse's unicity nor his presentation of it in Aquinas's Way to God rely on IoI nor do they appeal to any principle of difference. Instead, the argument is that, for something to be multiplied, it needs to be subject to something other which multiplies it (as form is multiplied in matter), but that pure esse cannot be so subject to anything (Kerr (Reference Kerr2015), 18–30). This, though, I leave for another occasion.

25. Doesn't Aquinas say that ‘angels’ (separated intellects) are also identical to their own essences? Despite answering in the affirmative in earlier texts, Aquinas's final position on this question appears to be ‘No’. Assuming angels exist, they are (as all creatures) composites of essence and existence (esse). Hence, not everything in the angel is identical to its essence, and so the individual angel can't be identical to its essence either – in fact, the angel is not identical to any of its components. Hence, only something which was absolutely simple, lacking all composition, could be identical to its own essence. See Aquinas, Compendium Theologiae, I, q. 15; Quodlibeta, II, q. 2, a. 2, and Wippel (Reference Wippel2000), 238–253 for discussion of the relevant texts about this issue.

26. I have been careful with my wording to make it clear that no incompatibility with Trinitarianism can be found here. The Father is identical to this God and the Son is not the Father, but the Son is still divine because, despite him not being the same person as the Father, it is false that the Son is not the same being as the Father (at least according to the traditional view of the Trinity I sketched above). Again, the point of this argument is that nothing ad extra of this God can be God, because God is his own essence. But divine simplicity implies that whatever is in God is the same one God.

27. Both classical and non-classical theists can utilize the methods of perfect-being theology – they will just disagree as to whether simplicity, impassibility, etc. count as perfections or not.

28. See, for instance, Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, I, qq. 3–26 or Feser (Reference Feser2017), ch. 6.

29. There is a case to be made that what matters to simplicity is what a worldview takes to be basic or fundamental. See Schaffer (Reference Schaffer2015), Dougherty and Gage (Reference Dougherty, Gage and Oppy2015), 60–61, and Oppy and Pearce (Reference Oppy and Pearce2022), 64. This would be relevant, since Schmid (Reference Schmid2022, 4–5) grants it is unclear whether theism or naturalism is simpler in this sense when it comes to qualitative, ideological, and theoretical simplicity, but concedes (ibid., 12–13 n. 9) that theism may be ahead when it comes to fundamental quantitative simplicity. Another problem I see is that Schmid relies on the idea that ‘Oppy's entities are a proper subset of the classical theist's’ (Schmid (Reference Schmid2022), 4). But this does not seem true, since Oppy's ontology contains something which does not figure in the theist's – an uncaused necessary initial physical state with a beginning. Also, while theism posits additional kinds Oppy does without  (non-physical, unlimited, perfect), because of this the theist is able to give a more unified account of the kinds Oppy recognizes. For the theist, all that is physical falls under the kinds contingent and caused. For Oppy, some of what is physical falls under the kinds contingent and caused, but other physical things fall under the kinds necessary and uncaused. It seems that the denial of the additional theistic kinds comes at the price of additional naturalistic kinds (or subkinds). This appears to be a multiplication of overall complexity difficult to compare with that of the theist.

References

Adams, RM (1979) Primitive thisness and primitive identity. Journal of Philosophy 76, 526.10.2307/2025812CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bahlul, RA (1988) Ockham's razor and the identity of indiscernibles. Philosophy Research Archives 14, 405414.10.5840/pra1988/19891416CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Byerly, TR (2019) From a necessary being to a perfect being. Analysis 79, 1017.10.1093/analys/any009CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cartwright, R (1987) On the logical problem of the Trinity. In Philosophical Essays. Cambridge: MIT Press, pp. 187200.Google Scholar
Cross, CB (2011) Brute facts, the necessity of identity, and the identity of indiscernibles. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 92, 110.10.1111/j.1468-0114.2010.01382.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Della Rocca, M (2005) Two spheres, twenty spheres, and the identity of indiscernibles. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 86, 480492.10.1111/j.1468-0114.2005.00238.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dolezal, JE (2014) Trinity, simplicity and the status of God's personal relations. International Journal of Systematic Theology 16, 7998.10.1111/ijst.12016CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dougherty, T and Gage, LP (2015) New Atheist approaches to religion. In Oppy, G (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Philosophy of Religion. Oxford: Routledge, pp. 5162.Google Scholar
Emery, G (2007) The Trinitarian Theology of Saint Thomas Aquinas. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Feser, E (2017) Five Proofs of the Existence of God. San Francisco: Ignatius Press.Google Scholar
Feser, E (2019) Aristotle's Revenge. Neunkirchen: Editiones Scholasticae.Google Scholar
Gel, EF (2021) How many and why? A question for Graham Oppy that classical theism can answer. Religious Studies, published First View online, 15 December 2021, 111. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0034412521000482.Google Scholar
Kerr, G (2015) Aquinas's Way to God. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190224806.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koons, RC (2018) Divine persons as relational qua-objects. Religious Studies 54, 337357.10.1017/S0034412518000227CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leftow, B (2004) A Latin Trinity. Faith and Philosophy: Journal of the Society of Christian Philosophers 21, 304333.10.5840/faithphil200421328CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leftow, B (2012) God and Necessity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199263356.001.0001CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leftow, B (2017) A naturalist cosmological argument. Religious Studies 53, 321338.10.1017/S0034412517000257CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leibniz, GW (2020) Discourse on Metaphysics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Oppy, G and Pearce, KL (2022) Is There a God? A Debate. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Pawl, T (2020) Conciliar Trinitarianism, divine identity claims, and subordination. TheoLogica 4, 102128.10.14428/thl.v4i2.23593CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schaffer, J (2015) What not to multiply without necessity. Australasian Journal of Philosophy 93, 644664.10.1080/00048402.2014.992447CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schmid, JC (2022) Naturalism, classical theism, and first causes. Religious Studies, published First View online, 4 April 2022, 115. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0034412522000051.Google Scholar
Sijuwade, JR (2021) Love and the necessity of the Trinity: an a posteriori argument. Religious Studies 12, 125.Google Scholar
Tweedt, C (2022) Absolute identity and the Trinity. Religious Studies, published First View online, 28 February 2022, 121. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0034412522000014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vaught, CG (1968) The identity of indiscernibles and the concept of substance. Southern Journal of Philosophy 6, 152158.10.1111/j.2041-6962.1968.tb02169.xCrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, TJ (2016a) Divine simplicity and the Holy Trinity. International Journal of Systematic Theology 18, 6693.10.1111/ijst.12133CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, TJ (2016b) Nicene orthodoxy and Trinitarian simplicity. American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90, 727750.10.5840/acpq201691397CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, TJ (2022a) The Trinity: On the Nature and Mystery of the One God. Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press.10.2307/j.ctv2d7x4zwCrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, TJ (2022b) Essence and existence, God's simplicity and Trinity. In Stump, E and White, TJ (eds), The New Cambridge Companion to Aquinas. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 5784.Google Scholar
Wippel, JF (2000) The Metaphysical Thought of Thomas Aquinas. From Finite Beings to Uncreated Being. Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press.Google Scholar