One, Undivided: The Classical Doctrine of Divine Simplicity and Why Craig Gets It Wrong
The doctrine of divine simplicity is one of those positions that sounds counterintuitive the first time you encounter it, and then, once it clicks, you start wondering how anyone could seriously think otherwise. The claim, stated in its classical form, is that God has no parts. No division between His existence and His essence, no real distinction between His attributes, no gap between what He is and that He is. His wisdom is not a property He happens to possess; it just is God, considered under a certain mode of description. Same with His love, His power, His holiness. You are not adding things together when you speak of God. The Augustinian instinct behind this was solid: if God were composed of parts, those parts would in some sense be prior to God, and then you've got an explanatory regress and, worse, a god who owes his existence to something other than himself. Aquinas systematized the intuition in the Summa Theologiae Ia, q. 3 with his trademark precision, but the roots go ...