God is all powerful by definition. From this we can conclude that God created time. Why? Because if time exists, then one is subject to it. And so if God did not create time, then God would be subject to something he did not create, which is incompatible with being omnipotent. So, given that God would be subject to time if time exists, something which would be incompatible with his omnipotence were he not to have himself created time, God created time. — Bartricks
Just because God created something that exists does not mean God is subject to it. — James Riley
Just because God created something that exists does not mean God is subject to it. — James Riley
I didn't say it did. — Bartricks
If time exists, then we are all subject to it, God included. — Bartricks
God is all powerful by definition. — Bartricks
Yes you did. And you did it again when you said:
If time exists, then we are all subject to it, God included.
— Bartricks — James Riley
I didn't say that if one creates anything one is then subject to it. I said that if one creates time then one is subject to it. And then I said it again. — Bartricks
There are some things that, if they exist, an omnipotent person would have created else not qualify as omnipotent. And there are a whole load of things that are not like that. — Bartricks
Just because God created something that exists does not mean God is subject to it. — James Riley
See? You said 'something' not 'time'. — Bartricks
So you - you - imputed to me the absurd view that if one has created something, one is subject to it, a view found nowhere in anything I have written. — Bartricks
I said that if one has created time then one is subject to it (and if one has not one is subject to it). — Bartricks
If time exists, God would be subject to it. Ok? — Bartricks
But time is what we're talking about here, — Bartricks
time is something that God would be subject to if God and time exist. — Bartricks
God is all powerful by definition. — Bartricks
No, not okay. It's God, after all. God isn't subject to time. — James Riley
So you meant 'time' and elected to use the word 'something'to express that? A word that doesn't mean 'time'and is considerably longer. Clever.
Good job too in addressing nothing argued in the OP. God is timeless. Ok,if you say so. That's how philosophy works. You say something and it's true. No need for arguments. — Bartricks
Amen.That’s what you seem to think yes. — khaled
But if God created time, then time was not needed for that initial act of creation. We can conclude, then, that there can be creation without time, for otherwise time itself could not have been created. — Bartricks
So you meant 'time' and elected to use the word 'something'to express that? A word that doesn't mean 'time'and is considerably longer. Clever. — Bartricks
Good job too in addressing nothing argued in the OP. — Bartricks
That's how philosophy works. You say something and it's true. No need for arguments. — Bartricks
don't know what you are on about. The only 'trick' I use is to combine ingenuity with ruthless reasoning. — Bartricks
But if God created time, then time was not needed for that initial act of creation. We can conclude, then, that there can be creation without time, for otherwise time itself could not have been created. — Bartricks
What happened before the emergence of our universe from a singularity? — GraveItty
What you say is clearly false. Of course God can choose whether to be subject to time or not. That's the point! How, though? Well, time would have to be God's creation. If time is God's creation,then he is choosing to be subject to it. So you seem to have missed the point somewhat. — Bartricks
'God' denotes a person who is omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent.
And time is made of the properties or relations of pastness, presentness and futurity. — Bartricks
I think it could be different to a degree, but not totally different. The reason being that it is by means of our experiences of time - our temporal sensations - that we are aware of time. Yet for those sensations to give us an awareness of time, they would surely have to resemble it? The image on a canvas created by a portrait painter needs to resemble, at least to some degree, the image that staring at the sitter itself would create in us if it is to qualify as a portrait 'of' the person in question. — Bartricks
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.