Rd007
Preston
A Christian Philosophy
Wayfarer
First, as per Aquinas, logical contradictions are not part of the omnipotence of God. — Samuel Lacrampe
A Christian Philosophy
Wayfarer
If God could change the laws of logic, then logic itself would not be necessary, and consequently, nothing that falls under the criteria of logic would be necessary; which is absurd. — Samuel Lacrampe
Marcus de Brun
You may be right about the historical facts - I don't know my history too well. But God cannot change the laws of logic. A conclusion is called "necessary" if it logically follows from the premises, and the alternative is illogical. Thus logic is the criteria to determine if a conclusion is necessary or merely contingent. — Samuel Lacrampe
A Christian Philosophy
wellwisher
wellwisher
3rdClassCitizen
Relativist
The laws of logic are not contingent laws like man-made laws or even the laws of physics, which are what they are but could have been different. Logic is an essential part of reality: not everything that is logical is real, but everything that is real is logical. I+I=II because you can see II in I+I (just remove the + sign). It does not "appear" from it, like an effect appears from its cause. — Samuel Lacrampe
A Christian Philosophy
rodrigo
rodrigo
Henri
Christians are limiting God by saying God can't simply forgive out of mercy, but he *needs/requires* punishment/justice to let go of the sinners. — Rd007
Abecedarian
Christians are limiting God by saying God can't simply forgive out of mercy, but he *needs/requires* punishment/justice to let go of the sinners.
Marcus de Brun
BrianW
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