An omnipotent person can do anything.
That's what omnipotent means.
So an omnipotent person can do anything. — Bartricks
You were doing so well! But I would say that to be able to do anything, you have to be able to do everything; as you say, omnipotent. The requirement of anything else undercuts the omnipotence. And I see no need of reason as in any sense constitutive of the omnipotence. After all, He is already omnipotent without it. And must be, because reason itself bestows no power, much less omnipotence.To be able to do anything, you need to be Reason, the source of all norms and evaluations. — Bartricks
Interesting. But it makes the good logically prior to reason. Which is nonsensical on your terms.What is it to be all-good? It is to be fully approved of by Reason. — Bartricks
Oh. It appears that the good is in the being and not in the doing. But even so still prior to reason. If the good is what is approved by reason, then what is the good before it is approved by reason?Which is what would be the case if Reason fully approved of how you are. Which is what being all-good consists in. — Bartricks
But you have just shown they are not, and saying it 30 or 300 times won't fix that.So, again, repeat 30 times. "Being all-good, and being fully approved of by Reason are one and the same" — Bartricks
Awe, not absolute, and not at what you think. Rather that you should trust your water to such a sieve. Try mending the holes.So, an omnipotent person will also be omnibenevolent.
That's called an 'explanation'.
It's beautiful. It's elegant. You should be in absolute awe of it. — Bartricks
You were doing so well! But I would say that to be able to do anything, you have to be able to do everything; as you say, omnipotent. The requirement of anything else undercuts the omnipotence. And I see no need of reason as in any sense constitutive of the omnipotence. After all, He is already omnipotent without it. And must be, because reason itself bestows no power, much less omnipotence. — tim wood
What is it to be all-good? It is to be fully approved of by Reason.
— Bartricks
Interesting. But it makes the good logically prior to reason. Which is nonsensical on your terms. — tim wood
Oh. It appears that the good is in the being and not in the doing. But even so still prior to reason. If the good is what is approved by reason, then what is the good before it is approved by reason? — tim wood
What logical necessity is there for all gods to be "omnipotent" and to all want contradictory things at the same time?
I think it is perfectly possible for there to be many lower gods ruled by one supreme God and each fulfill his or her own function in harmony with the others. — Apollodorus
An omnipotent god could make another omnipotent god. So there can be two omnipotent gods. There isn't- there's one. But if there's one, it is possible for there to be more.
People routinely underestimate what an omnipotent being can do. — Bartricks
From a plurality of prime movers, the monotheists have bargained it down to a single one. They are getting ever nearer to the true, round figure. — Christopher Hitchens
Also true that for things to get done, assuming there's some kind of committee/council of gods, harmony is a must. If not, any plans they have won't see the light of day. — TheMadFool
An omnipotent being can do anything. To be able to do anything requires being Reason, for otherwise one will be constrained by Reason. — Bartricks
All those guys had different definitions of the apex (God), but most took the existence of pyramidal Natural Hierarchy for granted. The notion of a non-hierarchical (egaliatarian) Nature seems to be a rather modern idea. Obviously, that classless concept does not describe how-it-is, but how-it-ought-to-be. Since the order of the real world (red in tooth & claw) is not Edenic (Lions eat grass and play with Lambs), they conclude that it was not created by someone as smart, or moral, as themselves. Hence, our disorderly world, with random acts of cruelty, is a result of erratic events instead of intentional intelligence. QEDWhere these guys deficient in their logic or where they on to something? — Trinidad
I don't know what you're referring to.What's the problem with Time Timmy? — Bartricks
But I don't agree on the chaos/disorder aspect. I can't see too much of that where I live in any case. It all seems pretty orderly to me. Perhaps not 100% perfect, but could be worse, so why complain? — Apollodorus
In short, disharmony is the name of the game. — TheMadFool
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