prometheus11
Well-Known Member
Oh, sorry, thought there was more to you than insults. How sad.
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I don't find a contradiction in suffering, God's perfect goodness and omnipotence.No its a series of conditional logic based on common assumptions of God. It covers several possible assumptions about God and addresses them all. The idea is to show how several ideas of God cannot logically be held at the same time--for instance that God is all good and all powerful.
Yes, you seem broken up about it. But what was it you offered again? I'll wait while you don't consider it.Oh, sorry, thought there was more to you than insults. How sad.
Well its easy to show and doesn't depend on suffering in the world.. If God is perfectly good, then it means he can do no evil. If he can do no evil, then not only does he not have free will, since he only has the selection of being good, but there are things can't do--all evil things. That's a huge number of choices God can't make since he's all good. Therefore saying God is all good and omnipotent is completely contradictory. Omnipotent, after all, means God is capable of doing everything. To make the assertion that God is all good is ridiculous--why would God be all good? Morality is a human invention--God isn't subject to human morals. God is beyond morality which is why God being omnipotent on its own is fair--God does whatever God wants and is able to do anything he wants.I don't find a contradiction in suffering, God's perfect goodness and omnipotence.
It means He won't desire it. Here's another way of answering you on the point of will and limitation...I can't add two and two and get five because I know how to add. Now does that limit my will or freedom? Only in a sense that knowing limits. Before you know better anything you put in your mouth may look like food. God's nature is the source of what we call the good. He isn't limited any more than I'm limited in expression by virtue of understanding subject-verb agreement.Well its easy to show and doesn't depend on suffering in the world.. If God is perfectly good, then it means he can do no evil. If he can do no evil, then not only does he not have free will, since he only has the selection of being good, but there are things can't do--all evil things.
Therefore isn't an argument, its an assumption. Again, perfection is limitation in the sense that knowledge is limitation. Before you know anything you're free to assume everything. But you're assuming a superior value that simply isn't in play. It's the same mistake some argue is made ontologically when asserting that physical being is superior to the idea of being. It's not objectively true, only a valuation wearing the robes of a truth.That's a huge number of choices God can't make since he's all good. Therefore saying God is all good and omnipotent is completely contradictory.
Not in my dictionary. It means "having complete or unlimited power". Choice isn't a power. Else you're arguing against God on the basis of the impossibility of a square circle.Omnipotent, after all, means God is capable of doing everything
I was answering the question of my definition of God. If God is less than perfectly good then he is morally imperfect, unless the standard of moral perfection is something other than being perfectly good. But to assume anything less of God is to render Him useless in relation. If God is less than perfectly good, exist or not, we shouldn't care, since He cannot then be relied upon and all you're left with is an unfathomable power that might as well be the mechanism of the universe. So if you're going to have faith in God that faith has to be formed in the foundational truth of His goodness or you're inarguably wasting your time instead of arguably.To make the assertion that God is all good is ridiculous--why would God be all good?
No one believes God is subject to human morals. Rather, many humans believe we are subject to or define morality properly by His light, which is manifest in us and available to us.Morality is a human invention--God isn't subject to human morals.
It means He won't desire it. Here's another way of answering you on the point of will and limitation...I can't add two and two and get five because I know how to add. Now does that limit my will or freedom? Only in a sense that knowing limits. Before you know better anything you put in your mouth may look like food. God's nature is the source of what we call the good. He isn't limited any more than I'm limited in expression by virtue of understanding subject-verb agreement.
Therefore isn't an argument, its an assumption. Again, perfection is limitation in the sense that knowledge is limitation. Before you know anything you're free to assume everything. But you're assuming a superior value that simply isn't in play. It's the same mistake some argue is made ontologically when asserting that physical being is superior to the idea of being. It's not objectively true, only a valuation wearing the robes of a truth.
Not in my dictionary. It means "having complete or unlimited power". Choice isn't a power. Else you're arguing against God on the basis of the impossibility of a square circle.
I was answering the question of my definition of God. If God is less than perfectly good then he is morally imperfect, unless the standard of moral perfection is something other than being perfectly good. But to assume anything less of God is to render Him useless in relation. If God is less than perfectly good, exist or not, it's of no real consideration since He cannot then be relied upon. So if you're going to have faith in God that faith has to be formed in the foundational truth of His goodness or you're inarguably wasting your time instead of arguably.
No one believes God is subject to human morals. Rather, many humans believe we are subject to or define morality properly by His light, which is manifest in us and available to us.
It means He won't desire it. Here's another way of answering you on the point of will and limitation...I can't add two and two and get five because I know how to add. Now does that limit my will or freedom? Only in a sense that knowing limits. Before you know better anything you put in your mouth may look like food. God's nature is the source of what we call the good. He isn't limited any more than I'm limited in expression by virtue of understanding subject-verb agreement.
Seriously? Sure you can. You have the freedom to be wrong. 2 + 2 = 5I can't add two and two and get five because I know how to add. Now does that limit my will or freedom?
Its not an assumption, its a deduction. Its A and B does not imply C.Therefore isn't an argument, its an assumption.
If there is something you can't do then it means you don't have unlimited power. Your power is then limited by what you can't do. The definition of power is : "the ability to do something or act in a particular way, especially as a faculty or quality"Not in my dictionary. It means "having complete or unlimited power". Choice isn't a power. Else you're arguing against God on the basis of the impossibility of a square circle.
God is not less than perfectly good he is beyond morality. He is not limited by morality if he has unlimited power.If God is less than perfectly good, exist or not, it's of no real consideration since He cannot then be relied upon.
I can't tell what it is in particular you believe that sums, which was possibly the point of declaring that after a rather large block quote. It doesn't follow as a conclusion from what it follows literally.So in other words he can do it, he just doesn't want to? Well then he can't be all good. If he is capable of evil he can't be all good. Someone who is all good by definition is not capable of doing evil. The most good you could possibly be would be if you could never be evil no matter what.
That's not really freedom. That's just a peculiar way to describe ignorance. The point of adding is to come to a sum. It's no limitation to know a thing. It's a limitation to not know--an imperfect and inferior sum of sorts.Seriously? Sure you can. You have the freedom to be wrong. 2 + 2 = 5
No, it doesn't. Here's an exercise in free will having nothing whatsoever to do with being wrong: jazz or something else?Having free will means the freedom to be wrong as well.
No, you're assuming that choice is only between a right thing and the multitude of wrong decisions. It isn't, supra. Nor is a greater number of choices a superior state, which is why the rapist isn't your social superior, assuming.If you can only do the right thing then it isn't free will since your actions are predetermined by what is right.
The problem isn't with God, but with your conflation andA computer program doesn't have free will because its results are determined by what is logical and it can't be wrong assuming proper hardware operation and a flawless algorithm. if God cannot be wrong then he is simply a computer program that takes in input and outputs a result according to an algorithm that determines what is right.
Try directly applying that formula to your statement.Its not an assumption, its a deduction. Its A and B does not imply C.
No, it doesn't. There's no definition in which that statement is true. If there is something for which you lack sufficient power then you can't be omnipotent, which is a very different thing. But you cannot do that which is impossible and there's no limitation in not being capable of doing what can't be done.If there is something you can't do then it means you don't have unlimited power.
Your failure is in the application, the "something" for which there is insufficient power to accomplish.Your power is then limited by what you can't do. The definition of power is : "the ability to do something or act in a particular way, especially as a faculty or quality"
No, but they can be. I may be absolutely still in absolute power, doing nothing.Power and choice are absolutely related.
Again, you're conflating things unrelated to power. Perfection of the good by definition limits choice, by virtue of denying an evil action, but that only limits a numerical rendering of choice, and one that leaves the greater number in an inferior position. Perfection is first and foremost the definition advanced for God. Perfect power isn't a mandate for any action nor is its nature diminished by relation to perfection in moral understanding.The reason why its ridiculous to say power and choice aren't related is because you would be implying that a God who could only make 1 decision regarding 1 thing, but was able to have unlimited power in regards to that thing, would be omnipotent.
I can't tell what it is in particular you believe that sums, which was possibly the point of declaring that after a rather large block quote. It doesn't follow as a conclusion from what it follows literally.
That's not really freedom. That's just a peculiar way to describe ignorance. The point of adding is to come to a sum. It's no limitation to know a thing. It's a limitation to not know--an imperfect and inferior sum of sorts.
No, it doesn't. Here's an exercise in free will having nothing whatsoever to do with being wrong: jazz or something else?
No, you're assuming that choice is only between a right thing and the multitude of wrong decisions. It isn't, supra. Nor is a greater number of choices a superior state, which is why the rapist isn't your social superior, assuming.
The problem isn't with God, but with your conflation and
Try directly applying that formula to your statement.
No, it doesn't. There's no definition in which that statement is true. If there is something for which you lack sufficient power then you can't be omnipotent, which is a very different thing. But you cannot do that which is impossible and there's no limitation in not being capable of doing what can't be done.
Your failure is in the application, the "something" for which there is insufficient power to accomplish.
No, but they can be. I may be absolutely still in absolute power, doing nothing.
Again, you're conflating things unrelated to power. Perfection of the good by definition limits choice, by virtue of denying an evil action, but that only limits a numerical rendering of choice, and one that leaves the greater number in an inferior position. Perfection is first and foremost the definition advanced for God. Perfect power isn't a mandate for any action nor is its nature diminished by relation to perfection in moral understanding.
I can't tell what it is in particular you believe that sums, which was possibly the point of declaring that after a rather large block quote. It doesn't follow as a conclusion from what it follows literally.
That's not really freedom. That's just a peculiar way to describe ignorance. The point of adding is to come to a sum. It's no limitation to know a thing. It's a limitation to not know--an imperfect and inferior sum of sorts.
Sure it does; I have the freedom to be wrong if I want, even knowing that I'm wrong. This is an example that has no right or wrong answer and so its not relevant to the question of whether God can be omnipotent and omnibenevolent because omnibenevolence is about what's right and wrong..No, it doesn't. Here's an exercise in free will having nothing whatsoever to do with being wrong: jazz or something else?
Actually its true based on the standard definitionNo, it doesn't. There's no definition in which that statement is true. If there is something for which you lack sufficient power then you can't be omnipotent, which is a very different thing. But you cannot do that which is impossible and there's no limitation in not being capable of doing what can't be done.
So exactly, which is why I brought up this point : "you would be implying that a God who could only make 1 decision regarding 1 thing, but was able to have unlimited power in regards to that one thing, would be omnipotent." I mean you're suggesting the number of choices you have doesn't impact the limitations of your power. Suppose for whatever reason that God was limited to only make one choice for all time--is he still omnipotent because he has unlimited power with regards to that one choice? How many choices does it take to allow you to have unlimited power? Is it the total number of choices minus the number of mutually exclusive choices based on logic?Again, you're conflating things unrelated to power. Perfection of the good by definition limits choice, by virtue of denying an evil action, but that only limits a numerical rendering of choice, and one that leaves the greater number in an inferior position. Perfection is first and foremost the definition advanced for God. Perfect power isn't a mandate for any action nor is its nature diminished by relation to perfection in moral understanding.
I don't know what your answer was aimed at because of the large, block quote that preceded it, which covered some ground.What doesn't follow as a conclusion and how doesn't it follow?
Why would you? Of what value is that choice except to underline your imperfection? Again, number isn't freedom and knowledge isn't limitation, except in that numerical sense.That's not ignorance. I know how to add-- 2 + 2 = 4, i just chose to add incorrectly to prove that I could make the choice to be wrong in spite of knowing otherwise.
Similarly, you could know what the good is and choose to do that which you know to be in opposition. Doesn't impact my illustration or argument.Since i do know the actual answer of 2 + 2 it means i can't be ignorant of the fact by the definition of ignorance.
I only just illustrated that it needn't have, supra. Again, Jazz or something else, chocolate or strawberry, that hill or this valley, and on and on.Sure it does;
To do something, entailing by logical necessity that the thing can be done or it's a nonsensical circle.Power, a noun, "the ability to do something or act in a particular way, especially as a faculty or quality."
To do anything that power can do and even then within the context of what He wills. He will not do that which is contrary to His nature. The power to be imperfect is not, in point of fact, a power at all. It's a symptom of a weakness, a flaw.Furthermore the definition of omnipotence: "(of a deity) having unlimited power; able to do anything."
I'm saying there is nothing to do beyond that which can be done. The rest is a word game, meaningless.What you're saying is that God is maximally powerful--that he has the maximum amount of power he could have without being logically inconsistent.
No, that's like suggesting God could randomly choose His nature. Not if perfect is meaningful and God is perfect.Someone with unlimited power would be able to determine what logic is
No. You're continuing to confuse volume with something that it isn't, supra.You're limiting God by the fact that he needs to be logically consistent and fit within the bounds of what you determine to be impossible.
I'm saying that God is the sum of power, of goodness, of knowledge. Logic is a means to reflect and understand that and not a shackle.So your God is only maximally powerful within the confines of logic, or are you saying that's the same thing as unlimited?
You're conflating power and the use of power.You certainly haven't demonstrated that unlimited power needs to be within the bounds of logical consistency.
No, it really doesn't. By way of example, unlimited goodness would necessarily have no place within it for evil. Again, it's the number/value problem with your thinking.Unlimited isn't limited by any standard that determines what is impossible--unlimited by definition rejects anything that would impose a limit.
That's absolutely correct. If God is and if God is perfect in His goodness then His power is absolute, even as His nature defines what that power will be used for and what it will not.So exactly, which is why I brought up this point : "you would be implying that a God who could only make 1 decision regarding 1 thing, but was able to have unlimited power in regards to that one thing, would be omnipotent." I mean you're suggesting the number of choices you have doesn't impact the limitations of your power.
I don't know what your answer was aimed at because of the large, block quote that preceded it, which covered some ground.
Why would you? Of what value is that choice except to underline your imperfection? Again, number isn't freedom and knowledge isn't limitation, except in that numerical sense.
Similarly, you could know what the good is and choose to do that which you know to be in opposition. Doesn't impact my illustration or argument.
I only just illustrated that it needn't have, supra. Again, Jazz or something else, chocolate or strawberry, that hill or this valley, and on and on.
To do something, entailing by logical necessity that the thing can be done or it's a nonsensical circle.
To do anything that power can do and even then within the context of what He wills. He will not do that which is contrary to His nature. The power to be imperfect is not, in point of fact, a power at all. It's a symptom of a weakness, a flaw.
I'm saying there is nothing to do beyond that which can be done. The rest is a word game, meaningless.
No, that's like suggesting God could randomly choose His nature. Not if perfect is meaningful and God is perfect.
No. You're continuing to confuse volume with something that it isn't, supra.
I'm saying that God is the sum of power, of goodness, of knowledge. Logic is a means to reflect and understand that and not a shackle.
You're conflating power and the use of power.
No, it really doesn't. By way of example, unlimited goodness would necessarily have no place within it for evil. Again, it's the number/value problem with your thinking.
That's absolutely correct. If God is and if God is perfect in His goodness then His power is absolute, even as His nature defines what that power will be used for and what it will not.
The why is irrelevant. I would do it to demonstrate that I am capable of doing it in order to prove a point that I have the freedom to be wrong. What you're describing, as i've already said, is maximally powerful, not unlimited. There's a big difference. I'm also not interest in perfect, so the fact that there are imperfections is a non issue for me. Again, when there's something you can't do then its limited by whatever criteria you're giving. Unlimited literally means this: "not limited or restricted in terms of number, quantity, or extent." you're limiting both the quantity and extent here.Why would you? Of what value is that choice except to underline your imperfection? Again, number isn't freedom and knowledge isn't limitation, except in that numerical sense.
It absolutely defeats your previous argument about ignorance, which i've shown can't be the case since I know the result that 2 + 2 = 4 is the correct result, but i've shown i can do 2 + 1 = 4 to prove that I have the freedom to be wrong.Similarly, you could know what the good is and choose to do that which you know to be in opposition. Doesn't impact my illustration or argument.
Then its limited by logic and what you define to be nonsense. And no where in the definition does it say that. It doesn't require there to be logical consistency--you're redefining all the words to include the caveat *within the confines of reason. I mean if I can imagine a being with fewer limits than the God you're proposing, then is it the case that the deity i imagine is more unlimited? If the deity i imagine is entirely supernatural and isn't subject to any considerations regarding logic or reality, and can define those whimsically whenever and however he/she wants, then clearly that's one less limit than your God which is beholden to logic. How are you defining unlimited exactly?To do something, entailing by logical necessity that the thing can be done or it's a nonsensical circle.
That means God is beholden to logic, which thus controls and limits God's actions. God cannot do that which is beyond logic. Therefore this is the definition of maximal power--the maximum amount of power that one could have within a limiting framework. Logic is the limiting framework. I mean the definition could not be more clearcut.I'm saying that God is the sum of power, of goodness, of knowledge. Logic is a means to reflect and understand that and not a shackle.
So God is now also limited by his nature in addition to logic since God is defined by his nature. he doesn't control or determine his nature, his nature controls/ determines him. That's sort of funny considering some humans have the power to determine their own nature and change it. Not being able to change your nature is a serious limitation and it shows that nature is in charge, not God.To do anything that power can do and even then within the context of what He wills. He will not do that which is contrary to His nature. The power to be imperfect is not, in point of fact, a power at all. It's a symptom of a weakness, a flaw.
My point has nothing to do with conflating power and the use of power. its whether God's power is limited by a logical framework. If he is then he's only maximally powerful by definition. He's as powerful as he can be within logic.You're conflating power and the use of power.
So then you would also say that a being which has unlimited power in regards to one thing--such as the ability to create a car that can drive an unlimited number of miles per gallon, therefore has unlimited power? I mean after all the number of choices don't matter right? What that actually is not unlimited power, but rather a power that is unlimited. Having a bunch of powers that are unlimited isn't the same thing as having unlimited power.That's absolutely correct. If God is and if God is perfect in His goodness then His power is absolute, even as His nature defines what that power will be used for and what it will not.
It seems like no religious person in the Abrahamic faiths takes Epicurus' riddle seriously:
... You're still left with malevolence or he just doesn't care about the pettiness of human sin.