idea of Dumbness (kharas) and it is the opposite of His Being a Speaker.
All these twenty are impossible in God. And know that the proof of each one of the
twenty qualities necessary in God establishes the existence of that quality in Him and
denies to Him its opposite. And the proofs of the seven thought-qualities are proof of the
seven derived from these. Thus, there are Forty Articles; twenty of them are necessary in
God; twenty are denied in Him; and there are twenty general proofs, each proof
establishing a quality and annulling its opposite.
NOTICE. Some say that things are four, entities, non-entities, states and relations (i'tibarat).
The entities are like the essence of Zayd which we see; the non-entities are like your
child before it is created; the states are like Being Powerful; and so, too, the
relations, like the establishing of standing in Zayd. ThisI mean that things are fouris
the view which as-Sanusi follows in his Sughra, for he asserts in it the existence
of states and makes the necessary qualities to be twenty.
But elsewhere, he follows the opinion which denies states, and that is the right view.
According to that view, the Qualities are thirteen in number, because the seven derived
qualitiesGod's Being Powerful, etc., drop out. God has no quality called Being
Powerful, because the right view is denial that states are things. According to this,
then, things are three:entities, non-entities and relations. Then when the seven
derived qualities drop out from the twenty necessary qualities, seven drop also from the
opposites, and there is no quality called, Being Weak, etc., and there is no need to
number these among the impossibilities. So, the impossibilities are thirteen also; at
least, if existence is reckoned as a quality. That it should be is the opinion of all
except al-Ash'ari. But the opinion of al-Ash'ari was that Existence is the self (ayn)
of an entity. So, the existence of God is the self of His essence and not a quality. The
necessary qualities, on that view, are twelve. Priority and Continuance and Difference and
Self-subsistence
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