this thread has already been done here: existence of god, in particular: Arguments for the existence of God; Arguments against the existence of God.
alasdair
alasdair
then they are absurdly powerful aliens, not gods, even if our ancestors might have called them gods.Firstly, a lot of gods in religions are not omnipotent, but they are still gods/God &/or the most powerful entity or entities in the all existence, but let's look at your omnipotence paradox reference.
i might consider that (if i knew enough to guess) "basic blissful qualia/consciousness"... but to call it god would be to confuse our language needlessly. you're saying you've had the spiritual experience; where does the deity come in again?I'd imagine the experience of divinity or god to be the experience of "no-thing" which is also paradoxically "everything", and your perspective colors this.
i think a better omnipotent paradox question would be "Could God create a being more powerful than himself?" That's a pretty heavy question.
Also if God is so powerful how is he able to be rendered into paradox through simple human logic?
Is god Omniscient?
Yes. He is God. That's in his definition.
So God knows what he is going to do before he does it, yeah?
So God has to do that one thing or else he didn't know what he was going to do and therefore he doesn't know everything and is not God.
God has no free will if his existence is pre determined in that way.
Where did God come from?
It could be said that we only take actions to achieve our own sense of personal perfection.
God is already perfect, because he is God.
Why would God take any action at all? Especially since he knows exactly what is going to happen before it happens. There is no surprise in his existence.
That's a pretty shitty existence.
How long did God exist before he created the universe? What was he doing then? Thinking about creating the universe? He already knew he was going to do it and what was going to happen.
The idea of God is so ridiculous.
then they are absurdly powerful aliens, not gods, even if our ancestors might have called them gods.
Scholastics solved this hundreds of years ago, (and others likely prior) God cannot be his own object because God is "pure act"; therefore God does not exist as an objectification, neither materially nor abstractly; God, of course, is spiritual solely. At least the portion of God that is 'omnipotent'. Compare the "kenosis" line of Christian teleology or the Jewish belief in God as the "ain soph".
Godel's Incompleteness Theorem proves any logical system is able to be complete or consistent but not both.
Right. OP's thought experiment parallels Russell's Paradox.A logical system is complete if any statement in it can be proven true or false. It is consistent if its impossible to prove contradictory statements in the system.
I think you're right BUT it generalizes to any formal system of logic.It was my understanding that GIT only says that the system of real numbers is not both complete and consistent, but that it doesn't say anything about other systems. I might be wrong though...
Not at all.Sorry if this was off-topic.
qwe said:i might consider that (if i knew enough to guess) "basic blissful qualia/consciousness"... but to call it god would be to confuse our language needlessly. you're saying you've had the spiritual experience; where does the deity come in again?
Thanks Prof.Eugene won the thread.![]()
Good point. Can OP's thought experiment be framed in an insufficiently robust system? I believe any insufficiently robust system would be considered "trivial" but not sure. At the least ordinality is required for all major mystical ontologies due to being arranged as cumulative hierarchies.Also, the incompleteness theorem applies to any system sufficiently robust to allow derivation of arithmetic.
not at all. who's trying to make you a believer? you're picking out inconsistencies or 'errors' in these ideas and sarcastically exclaiming that they make no sense. of course they make no sense! their nature - their inherent character - is nonsensical.and that's supposed to make me a believer.
their nature - their inherent character - is nonsensical.
alasdair
nature as in character or essence not nature as in birds, trees, etc.hehe
whos nature?
human nature??
;-)
if so dont trust it - no man is your friend...