You can believe that but you can't support it in any way what-so-ever so it is irrelevant outside your own personal belief. It is of absolutely zero help in our discussion of what actually is (indeed, I think the concept was created by early believers to block that kind of discussion).
I know can't support it in any way what-so-ever so it is irrelevant outside your own personal belief, but my personal belief is all I have and the same can be said for you, unless you think you can prove God is not beyond science and the Essence of God is not beyond logical analysis.
There is nothing in the definition of "religious belief" that requires it to be something that can't be proven.
No, but can you prove that God exists, or that humans have a soul, or that a spiritual world (aka heaven) exists?
If there is a bomb about to go off and I have a button that will disarm it, choosing not to press that button would still be an application of my control over the situation, just as choosing to press a button to trigger the bomb would be.
Fair enough, so by the same token God being
capable of something but choosing not to do it is an application of control, and thus it logically follows that an omnipotent God would not necessarily do everything He is capable of doing, like preventing the suffering in the world or proving that He exists to everyone, common atheist expectations.
That would have been one viable option he could have taken. He could have alternatively created a world where only the good (or at least not most evil) options were available.
What would that world look like? Do you like having sex? With the good comes the evil. There would be no rape and a lot less murder if there was no potential to have sex.
Do you like a roof over your head and food to eat? With the desire for money comes the potential to commit evil deeds.
Why should God create a world where there is no potential to do evil deeds when humans have the
ability to choose NOT to commit evil deeds?
Or he could have simply not created humans in the first place.
Sure, but is that an option most people would choose, to never have existed?
He apparently took the option which he knew would lead to all the evil in the world. I don't think you can absolve a hypothetical omnipotent and omniscient deity of that decision (however meaningless our objection would be).
Of course God knew that giving humans free will would lead to both good and evil in the world but it does not logically follow that God is
responsible for evil. God would only be responsible if God committed evil but God does not commit evil, humans commit evil.
I do not need to absolve the deity of anything He chose to do because an omniscient deity would have to
know more than any human about how to create a world in order to accomplish His goals, and after all the deity created the world He would be the only one who knew what those goals were. Likewise, if you created something you would be the one who knows what you created it for.
Every court of law in the world knows that adult humans are fully responsible for the choices they make because they have free will to choose, unless they are mentally ill, mentally challenged, or brain damaged. Why is it that some atheists cannot understand what everyone else in the world understands?
No, but we're talking about a god defined as omniscient and the omnipotent creator of everything. The first part states that they know everything that will happen and the second states that they caused (if only indirectly) everything that will happen.
The only way God caused anything to happen is by making it possible by creating humans with a brain and free will to choose, but God is not responsible for what humans choose to do because God does not cause humans to choose anything.
It is literally impossible for us to have any true free choice if anything is capable of knowing the future. If the future can be known, the future must be fixed and therefore our choices fixed, even if we remain ignorant of the fact. This is a wider philosophical concept beyond specific questions of gods.
No, just because the future can be known by God, that does not mean the future is fixed by God, because what God knows is sometimes subject to change, according to what humans choose to do. This gets into the subject of impending fate and irrevocable fate. An impending fate can be altered by God according to what we choose to do, such as praying. An irrevocable fate is never altered by God, even though God has the power to alter it.
The mathematicians by astronomical calculations know that at a certain time an eclipse of the moon or the sun will occur and it is
known that it will take place at a certain time, that is what will happen, but these are natural events, not based upon what humans might choose to do, so they are bound to happen.
What God knows will happen in the future (what God foresaw)
is not what causes it to happen in the future. God's knowledge is
identical with what will happen in the future simply because the All-Knowing God knows what will happen in the future.
“The Prophets, through the divine inspiration, knew what would come to pass. For instance, through the divine inspiration They knew that Christ would be martyred, and They announced it. Now, was Their knowledge and information the cause of the martyrdom of Christ?......
The mathematicians by astronomical calculations know that at a certain time an eclipse of the moon or the sun will occur. Surely this discovery does not cause the eclipse to take place.”
Some Answered Questions, pp. 138-139
Human free will decisions and the ensuing actions are what
causes things to happen and thus these decisions and actions determine what God already knows will happen in the future. We cannot deviate from what God knows we will do simply because what God knows is IDENTICAL with what we will choose to do (since an omniscient God knows what we will choose to do). However, it is not God’s knowledge that
causes us to do what we do; it is us who causes it to happen.
Again, what God foresaw is not what
causes anything to happen, not any more than a scientist who foresaw an eclipse caused that eclipse to take place.
Every court of law knows that humans have free will so God does not make our moral choices, we do. Just because God perfectly foresaw what our moral choices would be that does not mean God made those moral choices for us.
I didn't say "material world". That term has been too corrupted and misused to be of use here. I specifically said "anything that could be observed by someone or something". There is no fundamental restriction within that definition. If you wish to propose anything that outside the scope, you would need to specifically define why that thing can never be observed by anything.
For example, I believe that the soul and the spiritual world exist but the reason they can never be observed is because they are not visible to the human eye.
Not really, you just repeated another example of blind faith Christians are expected to believe because it is written in scripture and repeated by the priests. It is not meant to be questions or challenged.
That was my point. It is believed without question even though it makes no rational sense and defies what is physically possible.
That is impossible, you literally declare part of what you believe (the "Essence of God") as being beyond logic.
You took that out of context. Everything is not subject to logic. I cannot approach what cannot be known with logic. What I meant is that I can approach everything I believe with logical reasoning.
Logical: characterized by or capable of clear, sound reasoning.
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=logical+means
Evidence is a aspect of scientific method. If you are assessing evidence to determine the validity of a claim, you are applying science.
Verifiable evidence is part of the scientific method, but there is no verifiable evidence for any God; if there was such evidence the existence of God would be a fact, not a belief.
Something is scientifically
verifiable if it can be tested and proven to be true.
Verifiable comes from the verb verify, "authenticate" or "prove," from the Old French verifier, "find out the truth about." The Latin root is verus, or "true." Definitions of
verifiable.
https://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary/verifiable
What if they said they know their god is the only one, because they have the evidence of Messengers from their god, though they can't demonstrate that evidence to you and the Essence of their god is beyond logic anyway?
I would ask them what they have for evidence of their claims.
Yet again, you would first need to construct logically consistent hypotheses based on all those proposed attributes. For example, if there was an all-powerful, all-knowing, infallible and good god, what would you expect to see (or not see) in the world. Note that you can't add any additional characteristics at this point (such as what this god desires) without including them in the initial definition, and therefore constructing hypotheses covering them too.
As soon as you start talking about what you would “expect to see (or not see)” that becomes an ego projection. Do you understand what I mean? That is why this method will not work to prove or disprove any of those proposed attributes of God.
I personally don't think that is possible because some of those characteristics are incompatible but that is what you'd need to do, and could try to do if you wanted. I've seen other believers try exactly that (typically falling at the logical inconsistency hurdle).
I do not think any of these characteristics are incompatible. Which ones do you think are incompatible and why are they incompatible?