• Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    But insisting that an omnipotent being is necessarily omnipotent is to insist that being omnipotent essentially involves an inability - the inability to not be omnipotent. That just seems incoherent to me - indeed, it asserts a contradiction. For how can one say that an omnipotent being is able to do anything if at the same time one insists that there is something that the omnipotent being cannot do, namely divest themselves of their omnipotence? How is that not to assert P and not P? We agree, I take it, that no contradictions are true.Bartricks

    We agree, I take it, that no contradictions are true.Bartricks

    So we just dismiss this contradiction because it goes against our preconceptions? Doesn't it mean god can't be omnipotent? Or something? I mean, surely the principle of explosion or something like that wouldn't follow. But then again God could just make this contradiction not true, or so you claim.

    Maybe God exists, has thought about this, and has smoothed it over?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I guess what I'm saying is that if the consequences or parameters of a decision or course of action can be measured, we could theoretically have chosen otherwise; it could have been different.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I don't think the ability to choose between infinite options would render one incapable of choosing. Like you said, one could walk straight in infinite directions starting from a center point, but one would always be walking a measurable distance, and could say at what angle one was walking at if a circle was projected with its center at the center point from which one began walking, with the radius being the line along which one walks.

    The existence of infinite options does not mean that one cannot choose a course of action, or could not have chosen a different course of action, or could not have chosen no course of action. After all, you could have chosen a different angle or distance.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    But what about the argument that she must be omnipotent in possible worlds too in order to be truly omnipotent? I'm making the argument that if she divests herself of her omnipotence she must necessarily have never been omnipotent - but only in the possibility of her actually taking the route of making herself not omnipotent. It seems to me my argument still stands, unless God violates LNC or chooses to be omnipotent and not omnipotent at the same time.

    I also address the contingency in which God violates LNC and makes herself omnipotent again in another thread. I haven't gotten any feedback on it, so I don't know if my reasoning is solid, though.

    To put it another way, God is no more bound by the principle of explosion than he is by any other principle. He can make the law of non-contradiction false. So he can make the principle of explosion false too.Bartricks

    But the principle of explosion would be true globally, if not for god, right? How would logical deductions suddenly become valid if LNC doesn't apply for a pair of mutually exclusive propositions? Would God not have to fix the contradiction to make the principle of explosion not true?

    Thanks for responding, Bartricks, I appreciate you.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I'm sure I'm not, I just didn't read it anywhere, not trying to plagiarize or anything. I don't know if hardly anything I've written is truly original.

    Part of the fun is trying to figure this out on my own, at least partially.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Who knows. I don't really even care.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    So my point here is that the ability to break/ignore LNC defeats the OP - i.e. God can simultaneously be be omnipotent over the sum process and divest Herself of Her omnipotence.EricH

    I think it is less so that God is omnipotent and not omnipotent over the sum process, but rather that God can restore her omnipotence at any time, regardless of current status. If God decided to make a contradiction such as: "God is both omnipotent and not omnipotent" true, the principle of explosion would follow and we could then prove any statement or its negation true. Or maybe I'm wrong - I just read about deductive explosion today for the first time.

    edit: Whether or not the deductions would be true, I don't know. But it seems to me some logical systems would be all messed up.

    second edit: rather, the systems wouldn't be messed up; we would just not be able to rely on logical deductions anymore, I think.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    So my point here is that the ability to break/ignore LNC defeats the OP - i.e. God can simultaneously be be omnipotent over the sum process and divest Herself of Her omnipotence.EricH

    I think my argument stands so long as God is bound by LNC, but yes, otherwise it appears to defeat the OP. I'll have to think about this. Thanks for reading and understanding the OP.

    Btw, you know what D-kers are?EugeneW

    No, what are they?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    What they mean is mental illness, mostly schizophrenia, but often manifests itself with religious symbology and themes. I dont think they meant religiosity is a mental illness, nor saying religious people are mentally ill.
    I mention it because “sociopath” seems a pretty drastic take on the comment.
    DingoJones

    I don't think he is actually a sociopath, I just think that his intense desire to be regarded as a big brain atheist manifests as verging on anti-social behavior.

    I regret creating this thread, especially since no one has addressed the original part of my OP.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Why the fuck does that garner a :100: ? You come across as a genuine sociopath, 180. I'm done with you. Shit all over this thread if you want, you'll be getting no more attention from me.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Likening religiosity to mental illness is taking it a little too far. And since when is mental illness characterized as having faith? Where is the connection there? Do you even know a mentally ill or religious person?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Maybe there is an element of randomness that brought the laws into existence, or is baked into the laws that could give rise to the universe? I'm no physicist, or even a philosopher, so I'm kind of pulling this out of my ass.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    The answer to 'whether or not "God" can "divest" itself of its "omniscience"' amounts to a distinction that makes no difference so long as your conception of "omniscience" admits of logical impossibility / self-contradiction180 Proof

    But it doesn't. If you were reading the posts and read the OP you would see that I don't think God can do something logically impossible. You are being very stupid for someone with such a great vocabulary.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Why couldn't the laws of nature have been eternal and have given rise to the universe?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Why does the universe need an original cause rooted in supernatural creators?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Hash this out somewhere else please. This is totally unrelated to the OP. I made no fideistic claims in this thread and neither did TC. No one is proselytizing.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    God could do that, or just actually divest themselves of their omnipotence. I think he (they identify as male I think) is saying god could do both those things (one of which is become omnipotent again). I did a search of "law of non-contradiction" and couldn't find B mentioning it.

    Do you think that this has ramifications for the argument I make in the OP?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    If it came from God, who created God? Is it turtles all the way down? Have you done any research on this?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    You are trying to elicit some sort of response from me. But I'll go along.

    We have no reason to believe that God exists. No one has ever come up with a compelling argument for God's existence that hasn't been shot full of holes. So, I just disregard supernatural claims. It's that simple.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I agree: God, if they exist, is a monster.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    At least you have a sense of humor, sort of.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    Why isn't anyone even addressing the original part of my argument? Is the premise that controversial?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    ↪ToothyMaw "Omnipotence" does not entail 'doing what's logically impossible to do'; that's an ad hoc, arbitrary assumption – magical fiat. :sparkle:
    — 180 Proof

    And if you think differently then it is just a question of us holding different presuppositions. We differ. Which means we can move on.
    Tom Storm

    Is it logically impossible for god to lift an unliftable rock? Of course. What Bartricks is saying is that the unliftable rock contradiction doesn't mean God isn't omnipotent.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Sweet Jesus, dude, just stop. You don't need to smash every religious person you come across.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    But he makes that argument too, yes.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    Bartricks makes the argument that the unliftable rock isn't a contradiction because God being able to divest himself of his omnipotence does not contradict the fact that he is - or once was - omnipotent. If he made the rock he would just cease to be omnipotent. Its that simple. You might point out that at that point god wouldn't be able to lift the rock, but that doesn't matter; no one is claiming he is still omnipotent.

    That's my understanding of it.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    It doesn't, because if God cannot divest themselves of their omnipotence, they are not truly omnipotent. Unless it is impossible for god to do so? But why would it be impossible? No one is addressing that.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    The more common definition of omnipotence is magical thinking? What? The one I provide is coherent. And even according to your own, the formal argument in the OP still stands. And what about this:

    You forget that it is the same authority, being, or god, that CREATES that stone. You are not mentioning creation in your example and argument. That is a violation, since the CREATION of the stone is also done by an omnipotent being.god must be atheist

    Do you have a response to that?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I read the thread in which you made that comment, and I made a novel argument in this one. How about actually reading it and engaging with it?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    There is a common definition of omnipotence and more narrow ones. What makes yours superior to any other? It seems to me you are bereft of the capability to engage in anything even resembling honest debate or actual engagement with ideas, preferring to skirt around it with sophistry and bizarre comment formats.

    Look - no one likes Bartricks or the idea of God on the forums, but you shouldn't deny that some arguments are cogent on the grounds of a cherrypicked definition.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I meant the "silly philosophers" bit, not what you said about the argument. I would be flattered to be considered even a "silly" or misguided philosopher. That's what I was saying.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    I don't really understand. God created us in the image of the world? Could you elaborate on what you mean?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    That just shows how silly philosophers can be - trying to trick God into a contradiction rather than worshiping him.T Clark

    I would say most philosophers of religion spend their time trying to fix the plethora of contradictions associated with the idea of an omnibenevolent/omnipotent/omnipresent/omniscient god.

    If you are referring to me, however, I am flattered.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process


    While I'm at it, why do you always have to quote yourself from other threads? Why not actually engage with the OP? Is it even fun to copy paste yourself?
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    to imagine that our piles of words, even most logically arranged, can oblige God to be like this or like that is magical thinking.unenlightened

    Not when our piles of words reflect the nature of reality - which they often do. You could say the equations reflecting the motion of a projectile moving through space do not oblige said projectile to follow a parabolic path, but they do express a consistent pattern regardless.
  • Omnipotence as a Sum Process
    Excerpt of a recent post:
    The most charitable definition of "omnipotence" I've found is this: the ability of (a) being to do anything that is not impossible, or self-contradictory, to do instantly (i.e. just by thinking) and / or which no other being can do. So "no", (an) "omnipotent" being cannot make something "too heavy" for it to move if that something is moveable; it can, however, instantly move (with a thought) anything which is moveable.
    — 180 Proof
    180 Proof

    Your definition is far more narrow than any definition of omnipotence I've seen. And while it might be convenient for your argument, the fact remains that if we go by the common definition - virtually unrestrained power of influence, as tied to God's nature - God should be able to do anything, including divesting themselves of their own omnipotence, or any of their other characteristics. No longer being omnipotent does not necessarily mean that god could never have been omnipotent.

    I mean, why isn't it possible for God to make a rock too heavy to lift it and divest themselves of their omnipotence? That's the claim you're making, and you need to back it up. I backed up such an argument in the OP and no one has addressed it directly. Bartricks was right about this one (almost).

    You forget that it is the same authority, being, or god, that CREATES that stone. You are not mentioning creation in your example and argument. That is a violation, since the CREATION of the stone is also done by an omnipotent being.god must be atheist

    Exactly.



    But this actually matters sort of - at least to philosophers of religion.
  • (why we shouldn't have) Android Spouses
    Isn’t it true that the same can be said about auto-pilots in self driving cars? If one day Uber replaced all drivers with auto-pilots, you might be upset because you wouldn’t be able to have an interesting conversation with them and wouldn’t get pleasure from tipping them.pfirefry

    I am no authority on relationships or happiness science, but an auto-pilot is not to an actual driver what a pillow or non-conscious android is to a human spouse, imo. But if someone is willing to take that tradeoff, I wouldn't judge them.

    I should amend the name of the thread to "(why we shouldn't have) Self-Aware Android Spouses".