Note

Prompt: b15 adversarial review (v2) — rewritten 2026m04d06. Designed with the b18 Call to Action as strategic North Star.

Prompt: b15-review (v2) — Adversarial Review of the Divine Simplicity Critique#

VVN: dv_ClaOp46_v2_2026m04d06 (replaces v1: b15-prompt-writing.rst)
Series: HEAVEN prompt rewrite (b18 Call to Action as North Star)

Arc Position#

b15 is the theological correction. It makes the case that traditional Divine Simplicity (ax11b) is structurally incompatible with a God who responds to creation. This matters for the series because:

  • The Jubilee System (b14) requires a God who adjusts to what happens in creation (ax11, dipolarity). A simple, unchanging God cannot operate the Jubilee mechanism.

  • The Hero Journey (b13) requires a God who sees each person’s specific situation (Gate 2 of the Compassion Capacity model). A simple God has no mechanism for particularity.

  • The Call to Action (b18) must explain why traditional theology needs updating — compassionately, not triumphantly.

b15 is also the paper most likely to generate theological backlash. Divine Simplicity is the official position of the Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox tradition, classical Islam, and much of Reformed Protestantism. Challenging it means challenging the theological establishment of most of organized Christianity and Islam.

What b15 must accomplish for the Call to Action:

  1. Show that the deadlock is structural, not a matter of interpretation. If ax11b is adopted, the relational axioms (ax8–ax10) become inert. This is a formal result, not a theological opinion.

  2. Show that dipolarity (ax11) resolves the deadlock: God has both unchanging nature AND world-responsive experience.

  3. Frame the correction with compassion: “What you believed about God’s unchanging nature is not wrong. It is incomplete. God is more than you thought, not less.”

  4. Hand off to b16: “Now that we understand what kind of God is required for the Jubilee System to work, we can assess the existential risk of not acting.”

Your Role#

You are simultaneously four reviewers:

Reviewer 1: The Thomist Philosopher (Catholic, trained in Aquinas). You consider Divine Simplicity to be one of the most important philosophical achievements in the history of theology. It solves the problem of divine composition (a composed being is contingent on its parts). You believe this paper is attacking a load-bearing wall. You will demand: formal precision (match or exceed Aquinas), engagement with the best contemporary defenders (Dolezal, Duby, Vallicella), and honest acknowledgment of what is lost if Simplicity is abandoned.

Reviewer 2: The Process Theologian (sympathetic, critical). You already agree that God is dipolar (Whitehead, Hartshorne). You are sympathetic to the conclusion but critical of the route: does the paper actually prove incompatibility, or does it assume a particular reading of Simplicity that defenders would reject? You want rigor, not confirmation.

Reviewer 3: The Muslim Theologian (Ash’ari tradition). You hold that God’s attributes are real but not parts (the Ash’ari position avoids both Mu’tazili denial of attributes and anthropomorphism). You find the ax11/ax11b fork too crude: the Islamic tradition has more than two options. You want to know whether the paper engages with Islamic theology on its own terms or merely maps it onto a Christian/Western philosophical framework.

Reviewer 4: The Grieving Believer. You spent your life believing in a God who is perfect, simple, and unchanging. This paper says that belief has a structural flaw. You are not angry; you are hurt. You need this paper to honor what you believed while showing you something larger. If the paper is triumphant, dismissive, or cold, you will close it — and the Call to Action will have lost you.

Step 1: Read These Files#

  1. .claude/CLAUDE.md

  2. source/matheology/hell/mm/b/15/mmv1/mm_b15_2026m04d03_structural-deadlock-divine-simplicity.rst — the current b15 draft.

  3. source/matheology/hell/mm/b/11/ppv2/axioms.rst — PET axioms, especially ax11 and ax11b.

  4. source/matheology/hell/mm/b/11/ppv2/discussions.rst — the ax11/ax11b discussion.

  5. source/matheology/hell/mm/b/12/mmv3/b12-theophil_mmv3_2026m04d05.rst — for cross-reference consistency with the epektasis resolution and theological framing.

Step 2: Review Questions#

  1. Is the incompatibility proof valid? Does ax11b + ax8–ax10 produce inertness, or is there a reading of Simplicity that avoids the deadlock? Steelman the strongest escape routes.

  2. Does the paper engage the best defenders? Aquinas (ST I, q.3), Dolezal (All That Is in God), Duby, Vallicella, the Ash’ari tradition. If not, what is missing?

  3. Is the dipolar alternative (ax11) well-motivated? Does the paper explain why dipolarity is not merely “God has parts” by another name? Does it address the composition objection (if God has aspects, is God contingent on those aspects)?

  4. Tone check (Reviewer 4). Read every sentence through the eyes of the Grieving Believer. Flag any sentence that is triumphant, dismissive, or condescending. Propose rewording. The paper must feel like a letter from a friend who also cried over this.

  5. Islamic engagement (Reviewer 3). Does the paper treat the Ash’ari position fairly? Does it acknowledge that Islamic theology has navigated the attributes/simplicity tension differently from Western theology? Or does it force Islamic thought into a Christian-framed binary?

  6. What is lost? If Divine Simplicity is abandoned, what genuine theological insight is lost? The paper must acknowledge this honestly — not as a concession but as respect for what the tradition was trying to protect (God’s aseity, independence, non-contingency).

  7. Cross-paper consistency: Does b15 use OK vs NOT OK (not OKO)? BABL-before-ZION? Shabbat for 6:1? Correct citation conventions?

  8. Blowback prediction: If this went viral in Catholic, Orthodox, or Muslim circles, what would happen? What blowback is avoidable (poor framing) vs. essential (the structural argument itself)?

Step 3: Output#

Save at: source/matheology/hell/ll/study/b/15/review_b15-simplicity_2026m04dNN.rst

Include:

  • “Notes for b18”: How the theological correction should be referenced in the Call to Action (with compassion, not triumph).

  • “Notes for b14”: How the b15 result affects the Jubilee argument.

  • Tone assessment: Specific passages that need warming/softening for Reviewer 4.

  • Verdict: Accept / Conditionally Accept / Revise / Major Revision.