However this singularity is achieved it paves the way for omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence - God. — TheMadFool
But God is perfect and it would be an imperfection to have not existed for some time. — Bartricks
immediately ridiculed by use of the stereotypical "man in the sky" — Tzeentch
But God is perfect and it would be an imperfection to have not existed for some time. So any god that comes into being won't qualify as God. — Bartricks
However there's the idea of a technological singularity which, if achieved, would lead to exponential growth in technology - there would be no upper bound to what can be achieved. — TheMadFool
My point? Stop going for the low-hanging fruit of the naivety of the masses. — Tzeentch
but God is also essentially perfect. Indeed those other attributes flow from that (a lack ofor any one of them being an imperfection). But anyway, omnipotence would seem to be incompatible with having been created. — Bartricks
Also I'm made to believe that the "Christian" God you refer to has wide appeal among the faithful. Am I wrong? — TheMadFool
Can you point me in the direction of a God definition that is better? — TheMadFool
The source of being — Tzeentch
think it is very concise. What do you find vague about it? — Tzeentch
Nebulous is what one will get if one seeks a general definition of God. It is what most of the world's religions, philosophies and spiritual traditions will be able to agree upon, though. — Tzeentch
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.