No, it's not dogmatic; its just a specific theistic belief. Polytheism can be dogmatic, and you're making it such by attacking my monotheistic argument. — John Harris
You seem to be saying God must be omnipotent and omniscient and that any other conception is not God. You seem to be saying also that Jesus is God in the flesh and omnipotent and that other conceptions have to be in error
If you are saying something else please elaborate otherwise I find these proclamations, although orthodox, also dogmatic.
Also, you didn't address my point. I know something about U- that U is logically possible. — Chany
What's self-contradcictory about O? — Chany
U is the assumption. O is a real possibility. We can both play this game — Michael
O can't check all universes, which I've shown is infinite, for the existence of U. So, O is NOT omniscient. If U exists then O is not omniscient.
This can't be done because the possibility of U derives no contradiction. However the existence of O results in one. — TheMadFool
Just because you know something is possible doesn't mean you know it in the general sense of the word ''knowledge''. Knowledge is a justified true belief. As you can see U isn't known to be true (it's only possible) and so doesn't count as knowledge or something known. — TheMadFool
O can't check all universes, which I've shown is infinite, for the existence of U. So, O is NOT omniscient. If U exists then O is not omniscient. — TheMadFool
U is self-contradictory. — Chany
The being just knows it all already. — Chany
You don't read replies, do you? — Chany
The being just knows it all already — Chany
1) Your claim that U is self-contradictory is false. — TheMadFool
Can you clarify. — TheMadFool
Also thanks for your criticism. I think it would be better to define U as something about which something can't be known instead of U = something about which nothing can be known. If you like we can go with definition viz. U2 = something about which something can't be known. — TheMadFool
Infinity can't be known like the number 2 or 3,000. It simply extends without end. Asking O to give us the largest natural number will elicit the response that no such number exists. So, there are limits to knowledge but that, in my opinion, doesn't devalue omniscience. It's simply the nature of infinity. — TheMadFool
I provided an argument showing U is actually incoherent when you analyze it. Modal facts about logical possibility are facts. The statement "it is logically possible that it will rain tomorrow" can be true or false. "Unicorns are logically possible" can be true or false.
"U is logically possible" can be true or false. If this statement is false, then it is no threat to omniscience. If it is true, my argument shows it self-contradicts, as I know facts about U. — Chany
U = a thing about which nothing can be known
U is possible because there's no contradiction in positing a U. So, it is possible for U to exist in one of the infinitely possible worlds (argument A) — TheMadFool
No they arent. Knowledge of what someone is going to choose to do doesnt effect whether or not they have a choice — DingoJones
Argument A: Infinitely many possible universes
Let us take a mathematical variable x and assign to it values from the set of natural numbers {1, 2, 3,...}
For x = 1, one possible world exists. Let's call it A1. Now, x = 2 can't exist in A1 because that would entail the contradiction x = 1 and not x = 1 (where x = 2). So, x = 2 must be in another possible world A2, and so on, ad infinitum
Argument B: Omniscience is impossible
U = a thing about which nothing can be known
U is possible because there's no contradiction in positing a U. So, it is possible for U to exist in one of the infinitely possible worlds (argument A)
Imagine now an omniscient being O. What does O know about U?
Either such a thing as U exists or not.
If U exists then by definition nothing can be known about U. So, O is not omniscient because there exists something about which nothing can be known viz U.
O can't know U doesn't exist because there are an infinite number of universe O must check before O can determine the nonexistence of O. That's not possible because infinity has, by definition, no end. So, O is not omniscient.
Therefore, O, an omniscient being, cannot exist.
Is my argument sound? Is there a simpler proof for the nonexistence of an omniscient being? — TheMadFool
How about you address the rest of my post? The part you quoted is my claim, what follows is the reasoning for that claim. That reasoning is what you need to address. — DingoJones
Are you restricted to a one paragraph reading limit? Respond to the rest of what I said. — DingoJones
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