Trailblazer
Veteran Member
No.Is there anything we can do that you believe a deity cannot prevent or stop us doign if it wanted to?
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No.Is there anything we can do that you believe a deity cannot prevent or stop us doign if it wanted to?
No, God was not wrong.Then God was wrong, wasn't he?
God is not a human so God is different from a human.It seems to me that you are using the special pleading fallacy - claiming that we can't use standard reason to apply to God because God is "different", yet there is no evidence for God apart from the non-standard reason you are claiming we need to use.
Sorry but that is a still a special pleading argument on your part. If the rules are different for God and change the results you still have to explain why the rules of logic are different for him. And "Because he is God" does not cut it.God is not a human so God is different from a human.
You are the one committing the special pleading fallacy, not me, because you claim we can use standard reason to apply to God, and that ignores an aspect of God that is unfavorable to your point of view since God is not a human.
special pleading
argument in which the speaker deliberately ignores aspects that are unfavorable to their point of view.
https://www.google.com/search?q=special+pleading
Trailblazer said: Yes.
Then God was wrong, wasn't he?
We can make any choice we want and carry it out if we have the capability and opportunity.Not if we can only make the choice that god knows we will make.
It is not enough to simply assert "but we have free will". You need to explain how, if we can only make one particular choice, we have free will.
God, on the basis that He created us so God knows what we were created for.Who decides what is "moral" and "immoral", and on what basis?
It really isn't rocket science.And being all-knowing means that what he knows is fixed - because he knows it. Otherwise things would happen that he did not know.
It really isn't rocket science.
Depends on what you mean as a human thinking when you use one word God.Nope ! I am not a Calvinist.
However, I do believe that Almighty God knows what we perceive as the future. That is because Almighty God is not part of the universe [ space-time continuum ].
That means, in turn, that the future must be fixed .. is that correct?
Yes, it must be, as it means God knows what we all choose to do.
..so what fixes it? That would be us
It is no different from the past being fixed.
..and tomorrow will eventually become the past.
Do you understand? Many people don't, I find.
I think Einstein gets it.
No, God was not wrong.
God is not a human so God is different from a human.
You are the one committing the special pleading fallacy, not me, because you claim we can use standard reason to apply to God, and that ignores an aspect of God that is unfavorable to your point of view since God is not a human.
special pleading
argument in which the speaker deliberately ignores aspects that are unfavorable to their point of view.
https://www.google.com/search?q=special+pleading
No. It is you that are wrong.
"If God knows I am going to wear the red shirt tomorrow, then I MUST wear the red shirt. I am not able to choose the blue shirt instead."
That's true.
..but so is this..
"If God knows I am going to wear the blue shirt tomorrow, then I MUST wear the blue shirt. I am not able to choose the red shirt instead."
..so which is it?
Do you choose the red shirt or the blue shirt?
Are you going to say that it depends on what God knows?
..because it doesn't..
It depends on what you CHOOSE.
Two words taught by the human teacher.No, you are using the special pleading fallacy.
By your logic, I can invent any supernatural creature, claim that you need to use a special way of thinking that I just made up to learn anything about it, and also claim that regular reason won't do the job. And then I can claim that no one can prove me wrong! Any nonsense can be explained like that, but it isn't falsifiable. And if it's not falsifiable, then it's worthless.
No, because if you chose the red shirt God would have known you were going to choose the red shirt.At time T (the moment the choice is made) can he chose the blue shirt?
Obviously not, because that would mean god was wrong.
Therefore he does not have the ability to chose the blue shirt - even though he feels like he can. He might stand in from of the mirror for ten minutes thinking "red or blue, blue or red?" but blue is never an actual option. Therefore no free will to chose blue.
God does not remove your ability to choose the blue shirt. You can choose red or blue and God will have known that is what you would choose.Yes he does, but removing the ability to chose blue.
God does not have to observe our actions as we make them because God already knows what actions we will take by virtue of His omniscience.That negates the whole concept of infallible omniscience!
What you are describing is god observing our actions as we make them - and I can do that!
God knew we would make a certain choice because God is all-knowing, but God's knowledge is not what caused us to make a certain choice. We can choose whatever we want and God always knew what that choice would be.It causes that choice to be inevitable.
That is completely illogical because God's knowledge does not interfere with our free will to chooseExactly. We can only do the things that god knows we will do, and if he knows everything then we have no free will over anything.
Sorry, but it is clearly you who is unable to grasp a simple concept. It is understandable why - it's called "cognitive dissonance".Sorry, but it is clearly you who is unable to grasp a simple concept. It is understandable why - it's called "cognitive dissonance".
God is not a human parent so God is not responsible to care for any humans.If a policeman knew that a criminal was going to murder someone, and stood by while they did it saying "but I didn't make him do it", he would still be sacked at least, and possibly prosecuted.
If god was a parent, social services would have taken us into care long ago.
Whenever I say that Messengers of God are the evidence of God’s existence atheists say “that’s not evidence.”
So if “that’s not evidence” what would be evidence of God’s existence?
If God existed, where would we get the evidence? How would we get it?
As I see it there are only three possibilities:
1. God exists and there is evidence so we should look for the evidence.
2. God exists but there is no evidence so there is nothing to look for.
3. God does not exist and that is why there is no evidence.
I believe (1) God exists and there is evidence, because if there was no evidence God could not hold humans accountable for believing in Him. Why would God expect us to believe He exists and provide no evidence? That would be unfair as well as unreasonable.
No.4.God exists in the heart , religion exists in the mind
God is real as love
God knows 100% for sure that you will wear the red shirt but only if red is the color you will choose to wear.Lemme get this straight...
God knows 100% for sure that I will wear the red shirt.
I choose the wear the Blue shirt.
God's claim that I will wear the red shirt was NOT wrong?
Who is using the special pleading fallacy is all a matter of perspective.No, you are using the special pleading fallacy.
By your logic, I can invent any supernatural creature, claim that you need to use a special way of thinking that I just made up to learn anything about it, and also claim that regular reason won't do the job. And then I can claim that no one can prove me wrong! Any nonsense can be explained like that, but it isn't falsifiable. And if it's not falsifiable, then it's worthless.