his simple proposition easily resolves the so-called "paradox of omnipotence" asking "if God is omnipotent, then can he create a stone such that he cannot destroy?" Knowing about stretching of God's omnipotence in time, it becomes quite obvious that the question itself is incorrect. "What do you mean he can't?" "When won't he be able to?" "How long will not able?" "Never?" Then the answer: "Yes, he can. It will take about an eternity." — unDEFER
The common answer is that God can't do that which is a logical absurdity. — Tom Storm
Can God create a stone so heavy he can't lift it?" — Tom Storm
Question: why the existence of the absurd or the concept of absurdity then? Why would anything irrational exist at all? Or do you believe that everything fundamentally reduces to something rational and explicable. — Benj96
I think what the op was explaining is that omnipotence is dependent on/ spread through time.
The existence of time means pure potency is impossibly within temporality:
power = work done/time taken to do it. The greatest level of power in such a case is a state of affairs where work done = infinite, and time = zero (instantaneous). — Benj96
I have no belief in God — Tom Storm
Yeah but when you say this presumably you have a preconceived idea of the god to which you are rejecting?
Like would it not be more accurate to say “I have no belief in one version of a god” - your version, the one you’re rejecting.
But that’s one person - you. Or a group of people - Christians, Jews, Muslims etc. Not everyone’s god because to different people they have different ideas of the heavily loaded term.
Like the god I believe in is nature/ the universe . And by your statement “I have no belief in god” then logically you either a). Aren’t aware of my god/ don’t associate it the same way I do or b). You don’t believe in nature/the universe.
If anything that makes you agnostic not atheist.
You can be like “why do you call it god and not just the pursuit of natural sciences like everyone else? — Benj96
I feel science as wonderful and powerful a tool as it is, is failing to address concepts that are very important to me — Benj96
Yes, well your feelings are a separate matter, aren't they? — Tom Storm
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