1robin
Christian/Baptist
I do not get it. I said: Now the argument's critical flaw is that creation implies no need. Even if you did not agree, how in the world could you ask what flaw I was referring to.What "flaw"?
AgreedClassical Theism describes God is an all-sufficient, personal being that freely chose to create the world.
Proposition: God is not an all-sufficient being Good luck
He has no needs. I see no conflict in having desires though I am not sure the word desire accurately would convey what God has. He has no needs is the important point.1. If God is all-sufficient then by definition he has no needs, desires, or unfulfilled wishes
I think I agree but even if I did not the flaw will still wreck the argument anyway.2. God had a reason and purpose for creating the world
3. He created the world for his own benefit or for the benefit of others (the only two coherent reasons, at least one of which is in line with Classical Theism)
And here we go. If I plan to buy a car that has not been built yet, I might build a garage for it. A thing not yet in existence would still require (or could) require other things. IOW if God for some reason desired to make humans he must create oxygen, food, and gravity. Therefor oxygen, food, and gravity would be created to meet the needs of things not yet created. This is a fatal flaw but let's continue.4. He did not create the world for the benefit of others because there were no others.
An incorrect premise is a bad foundation for a conclusion. I am not saying he did not create only as a result of his desire to do so. I am saying you can't know he did because your premise is invalid.5. It follows from 4 that he created the world for his own benefit
This is going to be problematic because you are binding God by a human limitation. We must first have a need (which is a problem concerning your claim to begin with, as God has no need) then we later fulfill it. This time domain that limits our actions does not limit his. He could have fulfilled his desire as soon as it existed. Time is a necessary component of this claim, and concerning God we cannot make reasonable claim about sequencing. More importantly a desire implies no necessity of any kind.6. But if God is as 1 then he is and has everything
7. Therefore God that created a world for his own benefit is not all-sufficient (contradiction demonstrated)
I do not think even if your above points were al valid this would be a reasonable conclusion. Desires unfulfilled are not necessarily lack or insufficiency. An artist may have a desire to paint but did not actualize it. He is no less fully an artist. God is no less sufficient a creator if he did not create X or Y.Conclusion: There is no all-sufficient God
How is God less God without a creation? Having a potential benefit does not mandate a potential need or loss without it. I think I saw an argument in one of the theistic argumentation books I am currently reading that speaks on this problem of essence versus expression. Let me see if I can find it and I will add more. I think your argument fails completely but it is not as obvious in this form as it has been previously. Let me see if I can shed more light on it. Let me ask you this. Is God any less God because he desires that no divorces occur but has relinquished actualizing that desire. I also do not think you can find all-sufficient in the Bible anyway. That can be an ambiguous term. God in the Bible is said to be all powerful, morally perfect, all knowing, omnipresent, and personal. Those are not ambiguous. Where did you get all sufficient? I must know what your source meant by the term and how he derived it to know in what way it was used. It is not one I commonly discuss.The contradiction is demonstrated by a supposedly necessary being that is contingent upon contingent existence, a self-evident absurdity. And you will notice this argument is entirely consistent with my overall critique and the points Im disputing with you elsewhere, which is to say by theists own stated arguments God is self-contradictorily dependent upon the phenomenal world.