Doesn't follow. Again, you don't seem to understand what omnipotence involves. — Bartricks
IF there is a set of all sets, then it has a subset that is the set of all sets that are not members of themselves. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You see, right there, you skipped my point, posted at least three times now, that "member of itself twice" has no apparent set theoretic meaning. — TonesInDeepFreeze
By deriving a contradiction from the assumption that there does exist a set of all sets. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You just keep repeating yourself without coming to grips with the key points that refute you. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You have not shown that x = {x y z} implies a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If there is a set of all sets, then it has the subset that is the set of all sets that are not members of themselves. — TonesInDeepFreeze
is no reason for supposing that you can't have a set that contains itself as a member — Amalac
well, you've given no reason to accept that yet, except that x would “contain itself twice” — Amalac
'member of itself twice' has no apparent mathematical meaning. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Here you say they are members of themselves. If they are members of themselves, then x can be contained in x, right? — Amalac
If y and z are members of x, then you actually can write it (if a set can be a member of itself). (I'm refering to the part where you say x is a member of itself). — Amalac
The jump from A) to B) is problematic. Because triangularity is a property, existence may not be one. — spirit-salamander
So your proof of God is based on a controversial premise. It is also based on a specific Platonism — spirit-salamander
This phrasing could create misunderstandings. To be an imaginary human is to exist in the mind or imagination as a property of the mind or imagination. — spirit-salamander
This is not a feeling, my only true friend. My remark was a reasoned opinion. There are no feelings involved in there at all. — god must be atheist
Since when? This you declare categorically, without any proof or attempt at it. — god must be atheist
But an omnipotent being can make a non-doable into a doable. — god must be atheist
Why not? You come out with these cockamamie declarations that 1. don't make sense 2. don't have any reference and 3. don't have any proof. — god must be atheist
Anyway, you're profoundly confused about the nature of omnipotence and your proof of God does not work for reasons I have already explained to you. — Bartricks
Is it doable to move any amount of weight? Yes.
Is it doable to create a weight that is so heavy that it's not movable? Yes. — god must be atheist
You are confused. You do not understand omnipotence and thus do not grasp the concept of God.
God can do anything. A being who can create himself is more powerful than one who can't. So you are profoundly confused if you identify omnipotence with the latter and not the former. — Bartricks
Yet in your definition perfection is that which is the greatest. Well, given two or more equally great systems, neither or none of them are greater than the others. — god must be atheist
God does not have to be perfect. — Bartricks
There may be a view that being omniscient and/or omnipotent is not a feature of the perfect being. — god must be atheist
Where did you get that? It's simply not true. You certainly exist; I certainly exist; we are one and the same? Then how come we disagree? — god must be atheist
Perhaps you meant that they are possible.
But you haven't addressed the criticism from Kant, you've gone off on a tangent instead. Your notion of existence is at odds with the whole of mathematical logic. — Banno
SO things are absurd because they do not exist? But that's not right, since three-dollar notes do not exist, but are surely not absurd. — Banno
That way we can have things that are not contradictions but nevertheless do not exist. — Banno
There's nothing contradictory about it (though the way Meinong expressed his ideas is peculiar) — Amalac
What we are interested in here is existence outside the mind, right? — Amalac
If we use Meinong's terminology, then yes, I do have existence. If you are not using that terminology, then clearly you are assuming here that existence is a predicate (“I have/ don't have existence”) and can therefore be refuted by Kant's objection. — Amalac
...which seems to me to conflate the first order "triangles have three sides " with the second order "triangles exist". — Banno
in that case I'd say a human that is merely imagined has being, but does not exist. — Amalac
Once again, if you are following Meinong, all you are saying is that unicorns have being but don't have existence, since they only exist in the mind, whereas I have existence since I exist both as an idea in the mind and also outside the mind. — Amalac
What do you mean by “perfectly existing”? — Amalac
It's the treating existence as a predicate that gets me; saying something exists is not like saying it has three sides. That's why existential quantifiers are not first-order predicates. — Banno
See my other post you ignored here: — Amalac
But it does not follow that a perfect being is omnipotent, omniscient — Bartricks
There is also the devil corollary: — Amalac
Well said. There's an odd sort of self-deception needed to accept such arguments. — Banno
Is that the only point you plan on addressing? And you addressed in the form of putting words in my mouth? Because that's not what I said.
Let's tuch on say #3 which was
>>>Given 3, If something is meaningful or understandable, then it is certainly not hypothetically impossible. To reiterate: ALL hypothetical impossibilities are meaningless and not understandable.<<<
How on earth would you actually know this as a fact? Have you exhausted every thought possible? I highly doubt it so please elaborate on how you know this statement to be true and by true I mean fundamentally and not just your limited human perspective that only matters to you in your little bubble — MAYAEL
according to your limited understanding perhaps. — MAYAEL
Are you saying that there has to be an actual perfect existence that has existed or will exist at some point in time or does there only have to be a perfect existence that could theoretically exist but one that will never actually exist? In addition, wouldn’t a perfect universe be better than a perfect existence? I’m not understanding why you think that there’s nothing better than a perfect existence. — TheHedoMinimalist
In addition, wouldn’t a perfect universe be better than a perfect existence? — TheHedoMinimalist
I don’t think that a perfect existence logically entails that everyone gets what they deserve because I don’t think anybody deserves anything or fails to deserve anything. — TheHedoMinimalist