What they mean is mental illness, mostly schizophrenia, but often manifests itself with religious symbology and themes. I dont think they meant religiosity is a mental illness, nor saying religious people are mentally ill.
I mention it because “sociopath” seems a pretty drastic take on the comment. — DingoJones
In what way, TC, is your wife's or my mother's "experience of God's presence" intersubjective (i.e. publicly accessible)? — 180 Proof
I regret creating this thread, especially since no one has addressed the original part of my OP. — ToothyMaw
So my point here is that the ability to break/ignore LNC defeats the OP - i.e. God can simultaneously be be omnipotent over the sum process and divest Herself of Her omnipotence.So it seems to me that God cannot be omnipotent over the sum process described above if they divest themselves of their omnipotence. — ToothyMaw
So my point here is that the ability to break/ignore LNC defeats the OP - i.e. God can simultaneously be be omnipotent over the sum process and divest Herself of Her omnipotence. — EricH
Btw, you know what D-kers are? — EugeneW
So my point here is that the ability to break/ignore LNC defeats the OP - i.e. God can simultaneously be be omnipotent over the sum process and divest Herself of Her omnipotence. — EricH
To this I ask: do we view the act of divestment in two discrete spans of time - the span of time in which god is omnipotent and the span in which god has divested themselves of their omnipotence by creating the unliftable rock, or do we view it as a process spanning the sum of those two spans of time as they reflect a past and a possible future? If the latter, then I think there is a contradiction. — ToothyMaw
I think it is less so that God is omnipotent and not omnipotent over the sum process, but rather that God can restore her omnipotence at any time, regardless of current status. If God decided to make a contradiction such as: "God is both omnipotent and not omnipotent" true, the principle of explosion would follow and we could then prove any statement or its negation true. Or maybe I'm wrong - I just read about deductive explosion today for the first time. — ToothyMaw
Omnipotence means you can do everything. Imagine if you could do everything, unbounded by whatever laws. I wouldn't even be able to walk. What makes gods different? How can they be OP while being human or animal in shape (creating our world as an image of theirs)? — EugeneW
I don't say you can't walk. — EugeneW
Omnipotence means you can do everything. Imagine if you could do everything, unbounded by whatever laws. I wouldn't even be able to walk. — EugeneW
Omnipotence paralyzes. — EugeneW
To put it another way, God is no more bound by the principle of explosion than he is by any other principle. He can make the law of non-contradiction false. So he can make the principle of explosion false too. — Bartricks
I don't say you can't walk.
— EugeneW
Yes you did. — Bartricks
But what about the argument that she must be omnipotent in possible worlds too in order to be truly omnipotent? — ToothyMaw
But the principle of explosion would be true globally, if not for god, right? How would logical deductions suddenly become valid if LNC doesn't apply for a pair of mutually exclusive propositions? Would God not have to fix the contradiction to make the principle of explosion not true? — ToothyMaw
No. I said you could walk in infinite ways. — EugeneW
See? You did not say "I could walk in infinite ways". You said "I wouldn't even be able to walk".I wouldn't even be able to walk — EugeneW
Your omnipotence would destroy itself. Your omnipotence would paralyze its potency. — EugeneW
But insisting that an omnipotent being is necessarily omnipotent is to insist that being omnipotent essentially involves an inability - the inability to not be omnipotent. That just seems incoherent to me - indeed, it asserts a contradiction. For how can one say that an omnipotent being is able to do anything if at the same time one insists that there is something that the omnipotent being cannot do, namely divest themselves of their omnipotence? How is that not to assert P and not P? We agree, I take it, that no contradictions are true. — Bartricks
We agree, I take it, that no contradictions are true. — Bartricks
To generate 'explosions' and other such logical dramas one would have to assume the reality of necessity. Yet the reality of necessity is incompatible with the existence of an omnipotent being. Not necessarily incompatible, of course. Just actually incompatible. And thus as an omnipotent being exists, we can safely conclude that there are no necessary truths (including that one). And so if - if - the omnipotent being made a true proposition false at the same time, this not create any explosion, for it remains down to the omnipotent being whether any other propositions are true and false at the same time. — Bartricks
↪EugeneW
No. I said you could walk in infinite ways.
— EugeneW
No, you said that if you were omnipotent "
I wouldn't even be able to walk
— EugeneW
See? You did not say "I could walk in infinite ways". You said "I wouldn't even be able to walk" — Bartricks
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