Sheldon
Veteran Member
It only remains in the heads of people who don't know how to think beyond the box.Some people put themselves in a box and just don't know how to get out of it. They think with one-track mind and just don't know how to reason via critical thinking!
No, you obviously don't understand critical thinking, or theodicy, and are trying to wave away a rational paradox that theologians have struggled with for millennia, with desperate rationalisations. If you genuinely think you have solved it, I can only suggest you contact the Vatican, they'll be thrilled.
Obviously because the paradox remains.Why not?
You can pat yourself on the back if that makes you happy, but theologians globally will not be impressed, nor will anyone who understand the paradox of theodicy.I solved it! Do I get a prize?
I think you need to learn what it means.I already showed the theodicy is flawed.
No it doesn't, you don't seem to understand the paradox, or the rational deduction it is drawn from.It assumes our world is the center piece and everything revolves around us! (figuratively speaking). It does not understand how the time works outside of our universe.
God is not existing with evil in the same dimension - in a manner ancient philosophers assumed.
Why keep mentioning Christianity? Please define Christianity.
Obviously because one concept of deity that creates the paradox, is quite a common one among many Christians, though of course it is not unique to that religion.
Once again, I told you the theodicy is flawed. It starts with wrong premise!
Why are you telling me, I don't believe in any deity or deities, you can direct your objections to theists who believe in omniscient omnipotent and omnibenevolent deity.
It is not fooling me because I didn't put myself in a box!
The paradox remains, and if you genuinely think you have succeeded where countless theologians and religions apologists have failed for millennia, then it manifestly has fooled you. Hubris and stridency are not sound argument.
Not without violating the aw of non contradiction.God can be omni-benevolent and and all the other Omnis while suffering occurs on a tiny world of the size of a drop of water.
God can choose not to be omni-present .......Only folks who want to limit God's capabilities would create something like this theodicy.
You have simply proved again that you don't understand theodicy, or at least the rational contradiction that causes it. I will give you a clue, it has absolutely nothing to do with limiting those characteristics in a deity. Quite the opposite in fact. It's also you who trying to rationalise this paradox away by imaging a deity that can limit it's powers. Imagining a deity that chooses to allow suffering, no matter how it achieved this, cannot rationally be claimed to be omnibenevolent.
This line of thinking is exactly what creates atheists.
Nope, I am an atheist and theodicy has absolutely nothing to do with my lack of belief.
if some sort of evil exist in a realm while God decided to be temporarily absent - then it should not be an issue and it doesn't make God malevolent.
Choosing to allow evil is a rational contradiction with omnibenevolence.