mr.guy said:
I wouldn't say he can't experience it. If he's omnipresent, he'd experiences everything.
If this was the case then he could experience weakness, but if he is mnipotent, how can he experience weakness?
mr.guy said:
Omniscience would dictate he knows all. I don't think he'd be able to learn anything.
That's what I think, but Aqualung's case was, that he once wasn't omniscient and had to learn.
mr.guy said:
My assumption is that an omnipresent god would have no more distinct an "experience" via jesus than from anyone/thing in the universe.
Surely he would experience absolutely everything, such as pain, damage, weakness, illness, evil, etc, etc, if this was true.
mr.guy said:
How do you distiguish damage from change?
All damage is change, but not all change is damaging. You can change for the better.
mr.guy said:
Presumably, not if you're omniscient. Experience would be moot as far as learning would be concerned.
But for your point to hold, omniscience must be possible. (time to whip out "The impossibility of God" as i cannot remember the full argument).
The Essential indexical argument
No one other than myself knows what i kno in knowing that:
1. I am making a mess
The closest others may get is knowing that
2. Pandamonk, or Lee Brady, is making a mess,
or perhaps
3. He (indicating me
de re) is making a mess.
But what they know in knowing 2 and 3 is not what I know in knowing 1.
This shows that God cannot know everything, because i know something that he cannot know.
mr.guy said:
Think of it this way: you have a sum of one. Is that sum diminished if you express it as 2 halves?
Obviously not, but i don't understand how that fits into the argument.