In Anna Marmodoro, Damiano Migliorini & Ben Page,
[no title]. Oxford University Press (
2025)
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Abstract
Certain aspects of Aquinas’s account of divine omnipresence, as presented in his Summa Theologiae, are well known and often summarized, especially in the growing literature on omnipresence in contemporary metaphysics and philosophy of religion. Even so, some of the most interesting and surprising aspects of this same account—including that God is genuinely spatially located, despite being an incorporeal substance—have yet to be noticed, much less fully understood. This chapter examines Aquinas’s account of divine omnipresence in the Summa in some detail, with a view to highlighting those aspects of it that have heretofore been overlooked or ignored. Further, I argue that a proper understanding of the details of Aquinas’s account sheds new light on his views about spatial location and action at a distance.