This conception of g/God seems flawed by direct contradiction. If He knows the good, then he must perform it - nor is it reasonable to suppose that He has to think about it. It is always already done. Such the constraint of categorical absolutes.He cannot be, according to our own definitions, both omnibenevolent and omnipotent/omniscient. — Janus
The simple solution to this conundrum is to stop thinking of God as either omnibenevolent or omniscient/ omnipotent or else to simply stop thinking of God at all. — Janus
Notice the unusual myown fixation in this thread on the word "gratuitous"? — Wallows
I buy the notion that God is an idea, and as idea an open invitation to try to think in a Godly way. I.e., it's the power of the human mind that determines God in all respects and aspects, and in the thinking of which determines the quality of human being and humanity. — tim wood
I think perhaps ‘God’ does ‘suffer with’ the fawn - just not in the way we expect or intuitively understand. — Possibility
I kind of ran through your response, and think there's some merit to the idea. But, it strikes me ass odd to believe that you can't figure out the characteristics of a being by the things s/he creates. — Wallows
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.