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demonstrable by reason alone. Not only was eternal creation possible but our particular universe was in fact eternal and could be proven to be so. Avicenna, for example, maintained that creation never begun and that the universe had always existed. He considered the universe as created in the sense that it depended for its existence upon God, the Necessary Being. However, in sharp contrast to the prevalent Christian view, Avicenna held that God produced the world not freely but out of necessity. This was clearly problematic for Christian philosophers, especially since “the Church had reaffirmed her traditional teaching in clear and precise terms at the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215: God had through His omnipotence created the world out of nothing at the beginning of time.” 31 Moses Maimonides’ treatise Dux Dubitantium influenced most Latin scholastics. While the eternity of the world was not central to Maimonides’ treatise, he was concerned with proper understanding of the Scriptures. “He felt it was a mistake to base a proof of God’s existence on 31 Noone, "The Originality,” 278. Page 13 of 62