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The creation–conservation dilemma and presentist four-dimensionalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2002

WILLIAM F. VALLICELLA
Affiliation:
5172 South Marble Drive, Gold Canyon, AZ 85219

Abstract

On traditional theism, God is not only a creator but also a conserver. The doctrine of conservation, however, appears to face a dilemma. Either conservation is continuous re-creation with consequences inimical to diachronic identity, or conservation is an operation upon a pre-existent entity, which, because it is pre-existent, is in no clear need of conservation. This article first makes a case for the dilemma, and then proposes a way between its horns. Safe passage is possible if we adopt presentist four-dimensionalism, i.e. the conjunction of presentism, according to which temporally present items alone exist, and four-dimensionalism, the doctrine that individuals are not continuants but wholes of temporal parts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Cambridge University Press

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