In any case, if omnipotence doesn't have logical limits, then the word itself is non-cognitive and meaningless: nothing is being expressed if it's supposed to be some a-logical property (these last two words in combination are also cognitively empty, equally meaningless).
If you think you can’t have omnipotence without having limits on omnipotence (thus making it not omnipotent by definition) then all that proves is that the PoE as formulated was never logically sound to begin with and thus is a logically invalid question.
But the PoE never tried to put limits on omnipotence – you’re the one trying to do that based on other presuppositions you bring to the table about what God's nature and limitations are.
By doing that you abandon the very premise of the PoE formualtion.
Only the Biblical worldview I gave you allows God to retain the attribute of true omnipotence without being subjugated to forces beyond his control.
Even theologians and apologists run into the same problem you did on this issue: They will assert it as simple fact that God is all powerful but he can't create a contradiction without ever giving a theologian reason for why not. They just concede God can't do that without providing any reason why we should think he can't.
It's possible, and in my opinion more straightforward, to just understand that omnipotent beings still have logical limits by the incorrigible and transcendental nature of logic. It doesn't require referring to dubious texts passed down by cultural diffusion.
Except your method doesn’t work - Not if you want to have an all powerful god.
But that’s beside the point because you’ve now got much bigger problem with that you just said: Believing abstract ideas have the power to bring an all powerful real being under subjugation to the abstract idea.
You run into the same problem Vilenkin pointed out about those who advocate that math could have existed prior to energy and matter. How can abstract ideas exist without a mind to create them? How can abstract ideas act casually to create or act upon real things?
Logic is an abstract idea. Abstract ideas can’t exist independent of a mind to create and acknowledge them. Abstract ideas have no ability to act casually on real things.
Proposing that abstract logic can exist prior to god and above him, subjecting god to itself, is not only logically impossible based on everything we know about how abstract ideas work, but is ironically a more fantastical thing to propose than the all-powerful deity you are trying to describe - because at least the later isn’t logically impossible.
Logic, like math, is merely a mental description of how something works.
In the case of logic, it is a description of the nature of objective truth and a guide for how to recognize it.
But what is the objective truth it is describing?
In the case of math we have the universe.
If logic were only a description of the universe then it could not transcend the universe to describe God.
The only way it could transcend the universe is if logic doesn't come out the design of the universe.
But the only way logic can transcend the universe with a truly omnipotent God is if the logic we see in the universe is merely an expression of God's nature. Then it would exist with God prior to the universe's creation but without being a force beyond God's control that subjugates God to it.
Biblically God is the definition of objective truth. So logic is describing the nature of God.
First, I have not suggested that God should constrain choices so that they can never cause emotional pain to others (in fact, I said the exact opposite; that God is not culpable for people feeling emotional pain because I suggested it's probably necessary for free will to exist, whereas physical suffering is not).
You missed the point: If you accept the premise that taking away our free will isn’t an option for God’s design, then you are indeed trying to claim that God can’t have the power to prevent emotional pain because you think it is a necessary requirement for free will to exist.
Which means god is not omnipotent. He can’t design a world in which it’s possible to have free will and avoid emotional pain at the same time.
Trying to demand god be constrained by logic raises the issue I pointed out above.
You have no logical reason to assume God couldn’t have created this universe to run according to different rules of logic.
Or perhaps simply changed the dynamic of how relationships work in some way we can’t imagine so that no one can get emotionally hurt.
Or even just to simply take away people’s ability to feel negative emotions about relational things.
The point is, there are a lot of theoretical objections one could potentially raise against the kinds of limitations you are trying to put on your version of the philosophical god in the POE. Objections that don’t go away until your idea of God is refounded on Biblical assumptions about what God can do, can’t do, and why.
Second, I also doubt that a god exists at all: obviously, I'm using the framework of theism and moral realism to make an argument; which is the basis of reductio ad absurdum: entertaining premises to show a contradiction or absurdity is entailed.
That’s also why your entire exercise ends up being a non-starter from the beginning – because you have no basis for engaging in moral realism with regards to analyzing God's actions.
If you don’t believe a creator of the universe exists then you have no objective standard by which to judge God. As only a creator could provide an objective standard that transcends human subjectivity.
And if you believe this omni-being is the creator of the universe, then you logically have no grounds for accusing their designs of being immoral because by definition of being the creator they are the ones who decided how the design as suppose to be. No one else can decide that but them. Therefore no one is in a position to say it was suppose to be different.
Third, even outside of the premises, I can present moral arguments: they just depend on if the listener shares the same values. Given common values, moral arguments can still be made because moral arguments can come in the form of hypothetical imperatives: if I value X, then I should do Y (that sort of thing). If a person doesn't share the same values, then obviously yes, they could reject the argument: but I'm usually making arguments based on very common values like altruism and empathy. If someone doesn't value those I wouldn't want to talk to them anyway; but indeed, theoretically they could reject the arguments.
You aren’t talking about objective morality at that point. You’re talking about commonly shared subjectivity. Which would be a fallacious appeal to popularity. Something is not true just because it is popular, nor is it objectively moral just because it is popular.
The definition of objective morality is that it continues to be moral regardless of what people think about it - and regardless of how many people think it.
You cannot logically ever accuse God of being truly objectively immoral if you don’t even claim to have an objective standard of morality with which to try judging God with.
I'm not sure where you think this has happened. Be more specific where you think I've ccome to a conclusion based on what I like or not. I have framed the argument in terms of the incongruence of omnibenevolence with suffering, and stated multiple times (granted, not directly in our discussion) that the argument makes no judgment on whether suffering is "bad," just that it's incongruent with omnibenevolence.
In what I was responding to, you said:
This whole argument that human children "choose" (somehow by nature of some aggregate choice, whatever that means) to suffer horribly and then die is just not one that I'm willing to bite without a lot less nebulousness; and I don't think anyone should accept it without a lot more clarity either.
You said you’re “not willing” to accept it unless its “less nebulous” and don’t think you should have to accept it unless it’s “more clear” to you.
This seems to be an issue of preference rather than an objection based on logical truth. Which would make it a fallacious appeal.
Because you are not giving us any logical basis to believe my conclusion is incorrect.
You’re just saying you won’t accept it unless you know more about it how exactly it works.
Logically, that’s kind of like saying 400 years ago you wouldn’t accept the scientific fact that stuff falls down when you drop it unless someone can explain to you the exacting details of how gravity works and why it works the way it does (something which you couldn’t even fully do today).
I have noticed a repeating pattern with many of your objections: They focus around demanding to know exactly how things work to an exacting degree that isn’t actually necessary in order to establish whether or not the particular fact in question can be shown to be logically true.
There’s nothing wrong with asking the how and why questions; I share the same desire. But we have to make a distinction about whether or not the absence of an answer to those questions constitutes a logical basis for refuting the conclusion being true.
Otherwise it’s simply a matter of preference that you object to the conclusion on the basis that you would like to have more information about how and why it works before you accept it. But your personal reason for objecting doesn't refute the logical validity of the conclusion.
How can a finite being share perfectly in God's character and nature, for all time without error?
Being finite has nothing to do with it. You don't need to share in God's infinitude to reflect his nature.
Anymore than a mirror needs to be the size of the sun in order to reflect it's light.
You could think of it perhaps as the sympathetic resonance of one struck tuning fork imparting it's vibration to another still tuning fork.
Doing it without error has nothing to do with your ability to make the change, but simply to receive that which God wants to give you and be willing to let go of that which gets in the way of it.
By simply making the choice to be open to receive God's nature and put away that which is not of God.
That is why Biblically we see the idea that this is achieved by God's Spirit working in us and not our own effort.
If that's possible, why hasn't it been that way from the start?
It was. That's what Adam and Eve had in Eden.
As long as they did not make the choice to eat from the tree of good and evil, they could presumably do anything they wanted because what they wanted would always be in line with the nature of God and therefore not sin.
In the same way Jesus, who is called the second Adam, the only one to walk in perfect union with God, said he only did what he saw the Father (God) doing.
If it's not possible, how is the conception of heaven coherent unless free will is taken away or humankind's nature fundamentally changed (and if that's possible, why not have just started with that fundamental change)?
As I pointed out already, your nature would be fundamentally changed. Changed to be what it was originally.
You also haven't given any reason why the concept of heaven would not be coherent.
What specific reason do you think it wouldn't be?
Is your definition of heaven even consistent with the Bible?