Omnipotence

  • 121suprématie — [ sypremasi ] n. f. • 1651 hist. relig.; angl. supremacy, de supreme, du fr. suprême 1 ♦ Situation dominante, suprême (en matière politique, religieuse). ⇒ hégémonie, prééminence , prépondérance, primauté; omnipotence. La suprématie politique,… …

    Encyclopédie Universelle

  • 122goodness, perfect —    God s perfect goodness is his being unsurpassable in morality. Sometimes this is called omnibenevolence , but that label would seem rather to refer to the different doctrine that God is benevolent in every way to every one. Obviously… …

    Christian Philosophy

  • 123Bibliography —  ❖ Abelard, Peter (1849 59), Opera, ed. V. Cousin and C. Jourdain, Paris: Durand.  ❖ Abelard, Peter (1855), Opera Omnia, ed. J. P. Migne, Paris: Garnier.  ❖ Abelard, Peter (1969 87), Opera Theologica, i iii, ed. E. Buytaert and C. Mews, Corpus… …

    Christian Philosophy

  • 124Afterlife — For other uses, see Afterlife (disambiguation). After death , Life after death , and Hereafter redirect here. For other uses, see After death (disambiguation), Life after death (disambiguation), and Hereafter (disambiguation). Ancient Egyptian… …

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  • 125Cosmological argument — The cosmological argument is an argument for the existence of a First Cause (or instead, an Uncaused cause) to the universe, and by extension is often used as an argument for the existence of an unconditioned or supreme being, usually then… …

    Wikipedia

  • 126Demiurge — Part of a series on God General conceptions …

    Wikipedia

  • 127Incompatible-properties argument — The Incompatible properties argument is the idea that no description of God is consistent with reality. For example, if one takes the definition of God to be described fully from the Bible, then the claims of what properties God has described… …

    Wikipedia

  • 128Jacques Lacan — Jacques Marie Émile Lacan Full name Jacques Marie Émile Lacan Born 13 April 1901 Paris, France Died 9 September 1981(1981 09 09) (aged 80) Pari …

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