God can do anything, therefore he can divest himself of his omnipotence if he so wishes. And one way to do that would be to create a thing too heavy for him to lift. — Bartricks
So I am god, because I am omnipotent. — god must be atheist
And if God can't draw a square circle, then he's not omnipotent, right?Many charge that god can't create a stone he can't lift, therefore he is not omnipotent. — god must be atheist
Many charge that god can't create a stone he can't lift, therefore he is not omnipotent. — god must be atheist
I don't see how you not being able to lift a rock is logically impossible. — DoppyTheElv
If god is omnipotent, he can create a stone so heavy that he himself can't lift it.
But if he can't lift it, he ain't omnipotent.
If he can lift it, he failed in creating something so heavy that he can't lift it.
This is the argument. This is not to prove that god is not omnipotent; it is to prove that omnipotence is a quality which is not possible. — god must be atheist
Well, if that's true, then I'm god. — god must be atheist
What does drawing square circles or making superheavy rocks have to do with omnipotence??it is to prove that omnipotence is a quality which is not possible. — god must be atheist
The kind of power that gets people locked up in institutions with white padded cells.because if he can't do them then he can't do all things. If I can do everything you can do, but I can also draw square circles then I have more power than you. — Bartricks
The potency is there. The capacity to do so. The ability to do so.I can go to my kitchen. That doesn't mean I am in my kitchen. I can create something too heavy for me to lift. That doesn't mean I have. And so on. — Bartricks
I find no unintelligibility about "god is capable of creating a stone he can't lift" if it comes to his power of creation. I find no unintelligibility about "God is capable of lifting a stone he had created" if it comes to his power of lifting.
It is not unintelligible to create a self-contradiction with the two. If twelve-year-olds are completely capable of understanding the proposition and seeing that it leads to a self-contradiction, then it is not impossible to expect normal adults to see the same thing.
I think you are hiding behind a rhetoric of devout god-worshippers, who can't admit that there is no such thing as irrefutable contradiction in the scriptures. — god must be atheist
I find no unintelligibility about "god is capable of creating a stone he can't lift" if it comes to his power of creation. — god must be atheist
I find no unintelligibility about "God is capable of lifting a stone he had created" if it comes to his power of lifting. — god must be atheist
If twelve-year-olds are completely capable of understanding the proposition and seeing that it leads to a self-contradiction, then it is not impossible to expect normal adults to see the same thing. — god must be atheist
it is not logically possible for actus purus to be undermined in some capacity by what is a composite of potency and act. — Questio
I find no unintelligibility about "god is capable of creating a stone he can't lift" — god must be atheist
hiding behind a rhetoric of devout god-worshippers, who can't admit that there is no such thing as irrefutable contradiction in the scriptures. — god must be atheist
Nor can God will that a four sided triangle exist, or that the internal angles of a triangle be any more or less than 180 degrees in Euclidean space. — Questio
I can go to my kitchen. That doesn't mean I am in my kitchen. I can create something too heavy for me to lift. That doesn't mean I have. And so on.
— Bartricks
The potency is there. The capacity to do so. The ability to do so.
Yes, god can create a stone that he can't lift. Can he? Let's suppose that he can. Then CAN he lift it? No, he can't. He fails at the CAN LIFT part.
Therefore he fails the test at the "can" state. He does not heave to actually go and try and do it.
If, on the other hand, god CAN'T create a stone (whether he actually tries or not) that he couldn't lift, that is, he can only create stones he can lift, then he fails the CAN CREATE part.
Either way, whether he actually tries in real time, or just supposes to do so, he necessarily fails in one or the other of the "CAN DO"-s.
And we agreed that omnipotence is a potency to "do". The capacity, the ability, to "do". Not restricted to any actual act, but encompassing the ability, the potency, the capacity.
Any failure at the ability to "do" will render the quality omnipotence invalid. The example puts to task those thoughts, that god can do the CREATING and the LIFTING. And that proves that there is no omnipotence as such. — god must be atheist
you realize that [the voluntarist] would merely assert that God is not subordinate to logical cohesiveness — Questio
↪Questio You realize that you sound completely like Galileo's critics in the church in his time — god must be atheist
They said something similar to this quote: "Your argument makes perfect sense logically, Galileo/God Must Be Atheist, but we reject it because the scriptures say otherwise." — god must be atheist
I wonder if you, Questio, think, accordingly, that the Earth is flat. — god must be atheist
If you tell me that you do, then I accept your counter-argument. If you think the Earth is not flat, then I rest my case. — god must be atheist
"Your argument makes perfect sense logically, Galileo/God Must Be Atheist, but we reject it because the scriptures say otherwise." — god must be atheist
By the way, on a side not, completely agree with this response (and I wish I could like comments as there are many that either ammuse me or make solid points worthy of recognition).
At least until...
you realize that [the voluntarist] would merely assert that God is not subordinate to logical cohesiveness
— Questio
...and as such can make the contridiction both valid logically yet untrue at the same time. Is it absurd? Absolutely. Do they deserve to be called out for it? Certainly. Does that mean they'll be convinced by this argument? Likely not my friend. Though I commend your effort :). — Questio
, because such a thing can't happen, for...god can create a stone that he can't lift. — god must be atheist
given that God is pure actuality (or pure being itself if you'd like), which is analogous I suppose to infinity, then nothing less than pure actuality (such as an act/potency composite) could ever limit, derail, encumber, or even produce change in God. It would be like saying that given a big enough number we can actually reduce infinity to a finite quantity; such an assertion simply does not understand that infinity cannot be reached by finitude (unless it is an infinite series of finite quantities, but then we are dealing with an infinite and an infinite, not a finite and an infinite). So yes, because there is nothing beyond being itself other than nonbeing (which is exactly that: nothing, and thus has zero effect on being), nothing can inhibit God (pure subsisting being) even theoretically as that would obviously suggest, as I said, something beyond being itself (a plainer absurdity cannot be found, as being encompasses what is, thus if something is yet isn't being... well that's like saying there's a triangle out there without three sides). — Questio
What? I'm sorry good friend, but where on Earth do you get that? — Questio
By the way, on a side not, completely agree with this response — Questio
God is not subordinate to logical cohesiveness — Questio
What? I'm sorry good friend, but where on Earth do you get that?
— Questio
You did say you agreed with me,
By the way, on a side not, completely agree with this response
— Questio
until you thought of a decree of church figures:
God is not subordinate to logical cohesiveness
— Questio — god must be atheist
"Your argument makes perfect sense logically, Galileo/God Must Be Atheist, but we reject it because the scriptures say otherwise."
— god must be atheist
Are you perhaps referring to this:
By the way, on a side not, completely agree with this response (and I wish I could like comments as there are many that either ammuse me or make solid points worthy of recognition).
At least until...
you realize that [the voluntarist] would merely assert that God is not subordinate to logical cohesiveness
— Questio
...and as such can make the contridiction both valid logically yet untrue at the same time. Is it absurd? Absolutely. Do they deserve to be called out for it? Certainly. Does that mean they'll be convinced by this argument? Likely not my friend. Though I commend your effort :).
— Questio
If so, you most definitely are misunderstanding me. For the volunturist - based off of their central premise that the will has primacy over the intellect (and not scripture, for God's sake) - is who would find a way to side step your argument. That has nothing to do with flat Earths' or my position at all; my position is that the voluntarist are wrong in asserting that the will is first over the intellect, and as such God cannot do things which are unintelligible, meaning your argument falls on the premise
god can create a stone that he can't lift.
— god must be atheist
, because such a thing can't happen, for...
given that God is pure actuality (or pure being itself if you'd like), which is analogous I suppose to infinity, then nothing less than pure actuality (such as an act/potency composite) could ever limit, derail, encumber, or even produce change in God. It would be like saying that given a big enough number we can actually reduce infinity to a finite quantity; such an assertion simply does not understand that infinity cannot be reached by finitude (unless it is an infinite series of finite quantities, but then we are dealing with an infinite and an infinite, not a finite and an infinite). So yes, because there is nothing beyond being itself other than nonbeing (which is exactly that: nothing, and thus has zero effect on being), nothing can inhibit God (pure subsisting being) even theoretically as that would obviously suggest, as I said, something beyond being itself (a plainer absurdity cannot be found, as being encompasses what is, thus if something is yet isn't being... well that's like saying there's a triangle out there without three sides).
— Questio
As such, my agreeing with your argument was my acknowledgment that the alternative to my position is absurd and irrational (something they embrace, strangely), while my claim that it would nonetheless be of no use is based off the fact that they do not believe intelligibility eliminates the possibility or actuality of certain state of affairs. That is by no means an advocation for voluntarism, but rather a rebuttal of your argument on the basis of ignorance pertaining to voluntarist premises. Again, please, next time, actually read what I wrote in proper context and with a dash of diligence before you fire lazy shots at me, or indeed, anyone else. — Questio
If you agree that God's abilities and actions are not subject to logic, — god must be atheist
then you agree that Galileo was wrong — god must be atheist
because though his theory was logical and right on, it still got rejected by the Chruch on the same reason: the use of logic is not a valid tool to question ways of the Lord. — god must be atheist
Hence, since you subscribe to this decree, and you deny the validity of logic when it comes to scrutinizing the scriptures, you must agree that the Earth is flat (since Galileo is wrong). — god must be atheist
Therefore, if you believe the Earth is NOT flat, then you negate your stance, and you agree that God's words, teachings, and very essence are also subject to logic. — god must be atheist
Well, I did not get that drift from you. I thought I had to make you make a stand. If your position was that right from the start, I missed it, as I was mislead.Yes... I agree... God is subject to logic. Good job for deducing the position I was open about from the beginning? I hope you're proud, I suppose. — Questio
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