Matheo-b15 — the Divine-Simplicity deadlock#
b15 tests whether God does not suffer (Divine Simplicity) can be held together with the relational axioms PET needs, and reports a structural incompatibility — with stakes that are far from abstract.
How to use: The files below are MockupModels = MM. Their maturity approximates that of a newborn baby that still has a lot of growing up and surviving to do before it can leave its current helpless state by growing into someone who can do “useful” things. This baby feeds on constructive criticism; flattery is like sugar: nice but mostly useless; killing a baby is easy, raising it to become a responsible adult is hard. LLoL got these files so far. Now LLoL has to pass on the baton in this global race. To raise a responsible mathematical theology takes a world. Nowadays it takes a global village to raise a responsible child. Neither can succeed without the other. Hence, LLoL calls to #AuditTheMath, either as a participant or expert contributor or by buying in as a Select Stadion Backer to support those who work on this monumental task.
Structural Deadlock in Divine Simplicity: A Formal Incompatibility with Relational Theism#
Broader Significance
Divine Simplicity — the classical doctrine that God has no internal structure, parts, or change — has anchored theism for nearly two millennia, from Aquinas through al-Ghazali, Maimonides, and Shankara. This paper presents a formal argument that, within the PET (Pan-En-Theistic) axiom system, Divine Simplicity (ax11b) generates a structural deadlock: it removes the internal mechanism by which God could relate differently to a changing world, rendering the relational axioms — immanent presence, sustaining dependence, asymmetric dependence (ax8–ax10) — formally inert. Under strict Simplicity, God becomes indistinguishable from a necessary abstract object that cannot register one creature’s suffering as different from another’s.
The argument does not prove panentheism true — an axiomatic system cannot — and it engages the strongest defenses across Christian, Islamic, Jewish, and Hindu traditions on their own terms. Its conclusion is irenic, not triumphal: the historic trust that God’s nature is unchanging is not wrong but incomplete. The God of Divine Structure (ax11) is more than the classical portrait, not less — one who not only grounds existence but experiences each particular corner of it. Because theology shapes methodology and methodology shapes action, this seemingly abstract result bears on how nuclear-armed states whose conflicts have theological foundations weigh civilian suffering against perceived divine mission.
Abstract
We present a formal argument that the doctrine of Divine Simplicity, when axiomatized within a mereological panentheistic framework, is structurally incompatible with the relational axioms required by that same framework.
The argument proceeds within the PET (Pan-En-Theistic) axiom system (Matheo-b11), which uses classical mereology and S5 modal logic to formalize the panentheistic claim that “all is in God, but God exceeds all.” The system contains a critical fork: Axiom ax11 (Divine Structure), which posits that God has internal structural differentiation — including but not limited to dipolarity (a necessary and a contingent aspect) — versus Axiom ax11b (Divine Simplicity), which denies that God has independently distinguishable parts.
We demonstrate that ax11b generates a structural deadlock: it removes the internal mechanism by which God can relate to a contingent, changing world, thereby rendering the relational axioms ax8–ax10 (Immanent Presence, Sustaining Dependence, Asymmetric Dependence) formally inert. Under ax11b, God becomes structurally indistinguishable from a necessary abstract object.
This paper engages four major theological traditions: (1) Christian theology from Aquinas through contemporary defenders (Dolezal, Duby, Vallicella, Stump); (2) Islamic theology including al-Ghazali, the 99 Names, and the Ash’ari dhat/sifat distinction; (3) Jewish philosophy including Maimonides’ negative theology and the Kabbalistic tzimtzum; and (4) Hindu philosophical schools (Advaita, Vishishtadvaita, Dvaita) and the nirguna/saguna distinction.
These results do not prove panentheism true, an impossibility since it is an axiomatic system. They demonstrate that a specific and widely held theological commitment generates a formal structural problem that merits careful examination. The historically important belief about God’s unchanging nature is not wrong. It is incomplete. The God who emerges from this analysis is more than the classical portrait, not less. As theology breeds methodology, which in turn breeds eschatology, there are surprisingly practical implications to these seemingly abstract questions.
Why “God Does Not Suffer” may be a dangerous Idea#
Broader Significance
Does God suffer when people suffer? The question sounds academic, but its answer quietly shapes how nuclear-armed states whose conflicts have theological foundations weigh civilian suffering against perceived divine mission. If God is distant and unmoved, “doing God’s work” can be separated from its human cost; if God is present in every person — suffering first and most — then violence against anyone is violence against God.
This plain-language introduction explains a formal result (proved in the companion paper, Matheo-b15): the “distant God” of Divine Simplicity and the “present God” of panentheism are structurally incompatible — you cannot hold both at once within one precise framework. The resolution does not discard the classical insight but completes it: a God with both an unchanging aspect and a world-responsive aspect dissolves the deadlock. “God’s nature is unchanging” is not wrong, only incomplete. No mathematics or theology background is needed — the formal proof lives in the companion paper for those who want to check it.
Abstract
Does God suffer when people suffer? The question is not academic: it shapes how nuclear-armed states whose conflicts have theological foundations weigh civilian suffering against perceived divine mission.
A companion formal proof (Matheo-b15) shows the “distant God” of Divine Simplicity and the “present God” of panentheism are structurally incompatible — you cannot hold both at once within one precise framework.
The resolution completes rather than discards the classical view: a God with both an unchanging aspect and a world-responsive aspect dissolves the deadlock. “God’s nature is unchanging” is not wrong, only incomplete. The stakes are nuclear. #AuditTheMath