A quick run down of my opinion, following on from some of the philosophy that happened after Descartes, would be that reason is about how we string words together. Your error, which you share with other rationalists, is to think that reason binds how things are; and that hence by reason alone you can deduce how things are. The poverty of that approach was set out long ago by Hume, Kant and others, but perhaps was best criticised during the linguistic turn in analytic philosophy. Few would take this sort of natural theology seriously now.
But to call it ‘evil’ is to deny our contribution to it by our ‘natural’ resistance and fear. — Possibility
I've long had difficulty with the way philosophers talk about concepts. — Banno
"This sentence is not true" has no similar place. It is used to confound and entertain neophytes, instead. — Banno
It would define truth in arithmetic. The problem is, however, that the diagonal lemma predicts the existence of a counterexample: — alcontali
And, to be sure, the sentences in English are different animals from their counterparts in math-logic. The math-logic being rigorous, the English not. — tim wood
Could "He" concentrate his entire being in, and only in, a cup of coffee, or the end of your penis, for all eternity if "He" wanted to. What would that look like?I don't want a coffee, which is why I am not currently drinking one. But I still have the ability to get myself a coffee. — Bartricks
Seems to be way off topic. Can you lead us back? — Banno
What I'm particularly concerned about is why both goodness and knowledge are necessary. Doesn't this mean that knowledge, even omniscience, can't find reasons to be good. — TheMadFool
because to want something is always to be insufficient in some way. Such a contradiction is forbidden because it makes no sense, and things that make no sense set no limit on God's potency or on anything else. — unenlightened
So I have to conceive of God's creation as flowing not from any desire at all, but on the contrary, from a superabundance of quality - of love in that sense of love that is opposed to desire. — unenlightened
Could "He" concentrate his entire being in, and only in, a cup of coffee, or the end of your penis, for all eternity if "He" wanted to. What would that look like? — Janus
So we have no way of knowing what is a thing and what isn't, since our reason is not determinative of what is a thing and what isn't. — Janus
According to your argument our reason must be flawed — Janus
Of course we can know what is and isn't a thing - our reason (which are faculties, note - means of awareness) - provides us with the insight to know, and when we believe something to be a thing that Reason herself decrees to be so, and have come to believe it in manner that Reason approves of, then we know that it is a thing. — Bartricks
And so if 'concentrating' one's being is a thing, then obviously an omnipotent being could do it. — Bartricks
Again, that simply doesn't follow. It does in your mind, but that's why you need to update your mind. There's no 'must' about it. Our reason is, clearly, flawed (I mean, it seems self-evident to me that yours is), just as our sight is flawed, and our touch and so on. But there's no 'must' to it. There's a world of difference between saying something 'is' the case and saying that it 'must' be. — Bartricks
Which indicates that you are not sure if "concentrating one's being" is a thing. — Janus
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