I say this because what's truly impossible in human terms are contradictions. — TheMadFool
We may one day rule the universe, create another one for all we know but we would never be able to both affirm and deny something at the same time without the whole thing morphing into nonsense. — TheMadFool
I think it's safe to say that when we talk of god's omnipotence the gold standard for that should be the ability to defy the law of non-contradiction i.e. god is able to perform a contradiction. — TheMadFool
God, being omnipotent, would be able to do contradictions and still make complete sense. — TheMadFool
Only when there's only ONE god does war and peace both emanating from the same source amount to a contradiction. — TheMadFool
Since to be omnipotent, and god has to be omnipotent, there has to be contradictions — TheMadFool
It would be impossible for a human being to understand or perform contradictory actions because by their own nature they are unable to do so — substantivalism
Why? Why defy the law of non-contradiction and not that of the law identity or hold onto any other tens of different non-classical logic? Do you know that what you could happen to derive in one may not be derivable in another so in some cases it wouldn't be considered more powerful to hold one set of axioms over another. — substantivalism
I reject this premise — substantivalism
Good question. The law of noncontradiction is the right choice if the objective is to do something impossible. — TheMadFool
1. If there is omnipotence then there has to be contradictions — TheMadFool
1. If there is omnipotence then there has to be contradictions
2. If there has to be contradictions then there's only one god
3. There is omnipotence (god is defined thus)
Ergo,
4. There has to contradictions (1, 3 modus ponens)
Ergo,
5. There's only one god (2, 4 modus ponens) — TheMadFool
If you are able to do something that is impossible then it actually isn't impossible and rather not categorized correctly or specified. If something is impossible by definition then it CANNOT be possible if it's then clearly you do not understand your definitions enough to have changed your labeling.
If you are to abide by a non-classical logic then you can perform actions that would be consistent with the axioms of that logical structure chosen to ground the nature of such an entity. If the action is implicitly to be one that must abide by classical logic then actions which you cannot perform and would be impossible would be ones in which you aren't following classical logic. — substantivalism
It's not that there's failure in categorization of possible and impossible. You're using human logic to try and comprehend this particular aspect of divine omnipotence and it has led you to the conclusion that there's been a miscategorization. — TheMadFool
No such thing has occurred. A contradiction is impossible and this makes sense, it is also possible and this too makes sense, but only to god and not to us. — TheMadFool
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.