What is the analogy of faithful
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Faithfulness is the analogy of faithfulll.
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The "Analogy of Proper Proportion" is best shown by the following example from John Hick:
A woman or a man can indeed be faithful, which is evident in certain speech, behavior, and other patterns. Additionally, a dog is dependable. Although there are obvious differences between a man or woman's devotion and those of a dog, there is still a recognizable likeness or parallel otherwise, we wouldn't consider the dog as being devoted. A faint and inadequate resemblance of it in the dog is understood via analogy, but genuine loyalty is still something that feel in ourselves in the analogy between humans and dogs.
- Although Aquinas, not John Hick, is the author of the idea, Hick's illustration clarifies it.
- The fundamental premise is that although though we were made in God's image and likeness and hence share many attributes with him, we do so in a diminished degree because of our inferiority to him.
- Aquinas' work was predicated on a variety of presumptions that stemmed from his religious conviction.
- He undoubtedly held the view of God remained primarily responsible for the development of the planet and that, as stated in Genesis, people were made "in the likeness of god." Darwin's and Richard Dawkins' tacit and explicit denials of creationism respectively.
- One need not agree with his premises to reject the notion that we may infer something about God's character by studying a creation which might or might not be his.
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