3017amen's God is an abstraction. A fairly radical departure from most religions that comes to mind. That's assuming the assertions here. — jorndoe
Sure jorndoe, thanks for that observation. Being a Christian Existentialist myself, it serves to support my views concerning the concept of God being Dipolar (similar to the God physicist Paul Davies/The Mind of God posits) in that, God is both timeless and within time (temporal/a-temporal) all at the same time.
The important or consistent part to that is : 1. it defies logic/LEM which is fine. 2. yet it is still within the realm of logic (logical possibility) because of abstract mathematical truth's existing (which describe the laws of nature/existence) being logically possible/eternal/unchanging truth.
And so, as with human conscious existence (intelligence), where you have both consciousness and subconsciousness defying logic (LEM), why couldn't an 'intelligent cause' be that which is both abstract and beyond logic to us?
The mere concept of God then, is both logical and illogical as it should be(?). If there was a way to create time and existence (something from nothing/or just simply a universe itself), then this entire causation discussion would not exist, literally and figurately. That's my Existential take; absurd, yet not so absurd, when analogized to our existence.
Of course, that begs other questions like what is the nature of God's intelligence and does God even have consciousness for which we cannot even explain in ourselves, along with other questions like what was God doing before he created Time (BB), and was timelessness and eternity created or caused having a starting point...ad nauseum.
For shits and giggles, here's an excerpt from Eternity in Christian Thought that attempts explanation of a Dipolar God:
Timeless Without and Temporal With Creation
William Lane Craig’s view is that God is timeless without creation, and temporal with creation (Craig 2000). God exists timelessly “without” creation rather than before creation, because there isn’t literally a before. And so it can’t literally be the case that God becomes temporal, since becoming anything involves being first one thing and then the other. Nonetheless, God is “timeless without creation and temporal subsequent to creation ”, God “enters time at the moment of creation” (Craig 2000: 33). God exists changelessly and timelessly, but by creating, God undergoes an extrinsic change “which draws Him into time” (Craig 2000: 29).
The problem is that even extrinsic change still presupposes a before and after (Leftow 2005: 66). Craig is aware of the difficulty:
[O]n such a view, there seem to be two phases of God’s life, a timeless phase and a temporal phase, and the timeless phase seems to have existed earlier than the temporal phase. But this is logically incoherent, since to stand in a relation of earlier than is by all accounts to be temporal. (Craig 2000: 32)
His solution is
that “prior” to creation there literally are no intervals of time […] no earlier and later, no enduring through successive intervals and, hence, no waiting, no temporal becoming. This state would pass away, not successively, but as a whole, at the moment of creation, when time begins.
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/eternity/#TimeWithTempCrea