Thrice the fool Bartricks is, once because you are indeed a great fool, twice the fool for engaging with Bartricks and thrice the fool for doing so repeatedly. — DingoJones
Yes, that's right Hugh. If you'd been paying attention, you'd have noticed that I said God is by definition omnipotent. However, that's just a contingent truth about the word God. — Bartricks
God cannot overcome logic though. can he? He cannot be both omnipotent and be unable to lift a stone. — Janus
Of course they can. They are omnipotent. They are bound though by the possibilities. If they could do everything, they can do nothing. If you can't lift a stone, then you can't. If you can't travel faster than light then you can't. If they could there lives would be chaotic. A whimsical fleeting existence. God's are not like that. Like the universe isn't, which they created in their image. Is their will free? Of course. If they don't force the wills of each other. — GraveItty
Gentle reader, apply the argument to yourself. Have you not been potent with respect to all that you do and have done, thus omnipotent? And of all the things that would make you impotent, have you not necessarily not done them - and thus your omnipotence preserved? It would seem that Bartricks' argument makes you God! — tim wood
To say that God is by definition omnipotent just is to say that he must be omnipotent. — Janus
Omnipotence guarantees only all power that actually exists. God can still be all-powerful and not be able to perform the paradoxical. — theRiddler
The definition of a term is a contingent truth about it. — Bartricks
Omnipotence guarantees only all power that actually exists. God can still be all-powerful and not be able to perform the paradoxical. — theRiddler
Yeah, that's the usual explanation, and it has this singular advantage over Bart's illogic: it is coherent. — Banno
Let me go further.
"God can do everything absolutely; everything that can be expressed in a string of words that makes sense; even if that sense can be shown to be self-contradictory..."
Then they can do very little, as not everything can be expressed by strings of words. God can do oranges or blue, for example.
"...a proposition 'God can do so-and-so' is true when and only when 'so-and-so' represents a logically consistent description"
Not true. They can do a logically inconsistent dance. Logically undescribable.
"...'God can do so-and-so' is true just if 'God does so-and-so' is logically consistent."
Again untrue. God can do so-and-so even if so-and-so is logically inconsistent, like many people, like you, do.
"...whenever 'God will bring so-and-so about' is logically possible, 'God can bring so-and-so about' is true."
Boring. And untrue again! Obviously.
— Banno
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