The most charitable definition of "omnipotence" I've found is this: the ability of (a) being to do anything that is not impossible, or self-contradictory, to do instantly (i.e. just by thinking) and / or which no other being can do. So "no", (an) "omnipotent" being cannot make something "too heavy" for it to move if that something is moveable; it can, however, instantly move (with a thought) anything which is moveable. — 180 Proof
the ability of (a) being to do anything that is not impossible, or self-contradictory, to do instantly (i.e. just by thinking) and / or which no other being can do. — 180 Proof
So "no", (an) "omnipotent" being cannot make something "too heavy" for it to move if that something is moveable; it can, however, instantly move (with a thought) anything which is moveable — 180 Proof
Excerpt of a recent post:
The most charitable definition of "omnipotence" I've found is this: the ability of (a) being to do anything that is not impossible, or self-contradictory, to do instantly (i.e. just by thinking) and / or which no other being can do. So "no", (an) "omnipotent" being cannot make something "too heavy" for it to move if that something is moveable; it can, however, instantly move (with a thought) anything which is moveable.
— 180 Proof — 180 Proof
You forget that it is the same authority, being, or god, that CREATES that stone. You are not mentioning creation in your example and argument. That is a violation, since the CREATION of the stone is also done by an omnipotent being. — god must be atheist
to imagine that our piles of words, even most logically arranged, can oblige God to be like this or like that is magical thinking. — unenlightened
Your definition is far more narrow than any definition of omnipotence I've seen. — ToothyMaw
But this actually matters sort of - at least to philosophers of religion. — ToothyMaw
That just shows how silly philosophers can be - trying to trick God into a contradiction rather than worshiping him. — T Clark
Every theistic conception of "God" I'm familiar with, TC, is "a contradiction" personified, which is why "God" can only be "worshipped" and/or misunderstood. After all, "God" is an anxiety (i.e. placebo-fetish), not an entity (i.e. "invisible friend"). :gasp:That just shows how silly philosophers can be - trying to trick God into a contradiction rather than worshiping him. — T Clark
:chin: I can't say it any clearer than I already have on this thread:There is a common definition of omnipotence and more narrow ones. What makes yours superior to any other? — ToothyMaw
↪ToothyMaw I prefer rational speculation (i.e. philosophy) to mere magical thinking (e.g. "common definition of omnipotence"). — 180 Proof
Excerpt of a recent post:
The most charitable definition of "omnipotence" I've found is this: the ability of (a) being to do anything that is not impossible, or self-contradictory, to do instantly (i.e. just by thinking) and / or which no other being can do. So "no", (an) "omnipotent" being cannot make something "too heavy" for it to move if that something is moveable; it can, however, instantly move (with a thought) anything which is moveable.
— 180 Proof — 180 Proof
You forget that it is the same authority, being, or god, that CREATES that stone. You are not mentioning creation in your example and argument. That is a violation, since the CREATION of the stone is also done by an omnipotent being. — god must be atheist
Why are there so many repeated OP-topics... Why don't you (and others) use the forum's search function before starting a thread on a topic which has been done to death — 180 Proof
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