247:) (1.149–214). According to his argument, if something could come from nothing, it would be commonplace to observe something coming from nothing all the time, even to witness any animal emerge fully-made or to see trees at one point bearing an apple but later producing a pear. This is because there is no prerequisite for what would come out of nothing, as prior causes or matter would have no place in limiting what comes into existence. In short, Lucretius believed that
223:. In any case, Parmenides believed that non-existence could neither give rise to existence (genesis), nor could something that exists cease to exist (perishing). That which does not exist has no causal powers, and therefore could not give rise to something.
538:
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230:, which conditions that the structured and formed things that exist now derive from earlier, unformed and unshaped matter. Therefore, the creation act was the process of ordering this unordered matter.
262:, simply denied the essential premise that something cannot come from nothing, and viewed it as a presumption of a limitation of God's power, who was seen as in fact create something out of nothing.
302:
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539:"The Mesopotamian primordial ocean(s): Changes and continuities on the creative agency of the primeval aquatic deities (3rd and 2nd millennia BC)"
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214: Yet why would it be created later rather than sooner, if it came from nothing; so, it must either be created altogether or not .
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This article is about creation of the universe from preexisting material. For creation of the universe out of nothing, see
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Though commonly credited to
Parmenides, some historians believe that the dictum instead historically traces back to the
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In their interaction with earlier Greek philosophers who accepted this argument/dictum, Christian authors who accepted
204:τί δ᾽ ἄν μιν καὶ χρέος ὦρσεν ὕστερον ἢ πρόσθεν, τοῦ μηδενὸς ἀρξάμενον, φῦν; οὕτως ἢ πάμπαν πελέναι χρεών ἐστιν ἢ οὐχί.
682:
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165:("creation from God"), referring to a derivation of the cosmos from the substance of God either partially (in
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Greek philosophers widely accepted the notion that creation acted on eternally existing, uncreated matter.
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624:"'Creatio Ex Nihilo': A Context for the Emergence of the Christian Doctrine of Creation"
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189:' articulation of the dictum that "nothing comes from nothing" is first attested in
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Plato Versus
Parmenides: The Debate Over Coming-into-Being in Greek Philosophy
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Genesis and Cosmos: Basil and Origen on
Genesis 1 and Cosmology
541:. In Monteiro, Maria do Rosário; Kong, Mário S. Ming (eds.).
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Theologies of
Creation: Creatio Ex Nihilo and Its New Rivals
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was the dominant concept among such writers. At some point,
62:, where the universe is created out of nothing. The idea of
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A typical expression of it can be found in the writings of
29:
View that the universe originates from pre-existing matter
570:"This Is My Doctrine": The Development of Mormon Theology
588:
Absence and
Nothing: The Philosophy of what There is Not
140:, a more common version of the expression was coined by
132:). Although it is not clear if the dictum goes back to
86:. It was also held by a few early Christians, although
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Greek philosophers came to widely frame the notion of
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251:would lead to a lack of regularity in nature.
237:expressed this principle in his first book of
150:that "nothing can be created out of nothing".
530:Reconsidering Creation Ex Nihilo in Genesis 1
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579:Critical Practice: Philosophy and Creativity
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303:Nothing from Nothing (Billy Preston song)
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537:De Almeida, Isabel Gomes (2021).
545:. CRC Press. pp. 391–397.
233:The Roman poet and philosopher
688:Ancient near eastern cosmology
532:. Penn State University Press.
308:Principle of sufficient reason
68:ancient near eastern cosmology
1:
613:Roecklein, Robert J. (2011).
318:Spontaneous symmetry breaking
313:Problem of the creator of God
628:Scottish Journal of Theology
568:Harrell, Charles R. (2011).
528:Chambers, Nathan J. (2021).
468:"Parmenides, Fragments 1-19"
447:"Parmenides, Fragments 1-19"
328:Why there is anything at all
293:Jainism and non-creationism
177:(ongoing divine creation).
161:("creation from nothing");
74:such as is in the works of
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590:. Oxford University Press.
577:McQuillan, Martin (2019).
114:nothing comes from nothing
82:, and across the board in
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640:10.1017/S0036930600039089
595:Oord, Thomas Jay (2014).
586:Mumford, Stephen (2021).
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604:Rasmussen, Adam (2019).
581:. Bloomsbury Publishing.
551:10.1201/9780429297786-56
543:Tradition and Innovation
209:In English translation:
136:(5th century BC) or the
84:ancient Greek philosophy
673:Philosophical arguments
622:Young, Frances (1991).
599:. Taylor & Francis.
245:On the Nature of Things
94:came to be accepted in
44:is the notion that the
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678:Philosophy of physics
572:. Greg Kofford Books.
288:Eternity of the world
221:Milesian philosophers
138:Milesian philosophers
72:early Greek cosmology
169:) or completely (in
144:, who stated in his
130:ex nihilo nihil fit
18:Creation ex materia
683:Physical cosmology
617:. Lexington Books.
490:, p. 139–140.
382:, p. 233–234.
155:creatio ex materia
103:creatio ex materia
92:creatio ex materia
64:creatio ex materia
48:was formed out of
41:Creatio ex materia
560:978-0-429-29778-6
370:, p. 96–103.
298:Melissus of Samos
278:Creatio ex nihilo
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474:2020-02-04
453:2020-02-04
335:References
283:Empedocles
187:Parmenides
134:Parmenides
422:Oord 2014
340:Citations
235:Lucretius
191:Aristotle
142:Lucretius
105:with the
96:Mormonism
608:. Brill.
266:See also
228:Plutarch
171:pandeism
157:include
46:universe
522:Sources
258:, like
196:Physics
173:), and
50:eternal
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260:Origen
110:dictum
80:Hesiod
54:matter
126:Latin
118:Greek
76:Homer
555:ISBN
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