In theology there is an answer, all wisdom comes from God and people cannot fathom the wisdom higher than that of God. — SpaceDweller
if god is omnipotent can he make a square circle? Again - you could argue god can't do what is logically impossible, so this is also a meaningless question. — Tom Storm
Ultimately, the paradox can be reduced to the fundamental problem of theodicy: does God have the power to destroy all evil now, immediately? — Angelo Cannata
This is a paradox one might come across if they consider God's omnipotence. If the answer is yes, then there is one thing he can't do (lift a heavy enough rock), which contradicts the definition of omnipotence (being able to do anything). The same applies if the answer is no. How would you solve this paradox? — Cidat
because we can't fathom God's wisdom — SpaceDweller
This is a paradox one might come across if they consider God's omnipotence. If the answer is yes, then there is one thing he can't do (lift a heavy enough rock), which contradicts the definition of omnipotence (being able to do anything). The same applies if the answer is no. How would you solve this paradox? — Cidat
In theology there is an answer, all wisdom comes from God and people cannot fathom the wisdom higher than that of God. — SpaceDweller
Dialetheism (from Greek δι- di- 'twice' and ἀλήθεια alḗtheia 'truth') is the view that there are statements which are both true and false. More precisely, it is the belief that there can be a true statement whose negation is also true.
The emphasised part is a non sequitur. That he can create such a rock isn't that he does create such a rock.
You might as well ask "can a two-armed man cut off one arm?" and answer with "if he can then he'll only have one arm and so therefore isn't a two-armed man which is a contradiction" and so conclude that a two-armed man can't cut off one arm, which is of course false; I have two arms and am quite capable of cutting one off.
So an answer to your question is; yes, he can create such a rock, but because he doesn't there's nothing he can't do. — Michael
Can God construct a rock so heavy that he can't lift it? — Cidat
I think the limitations in paradoxes are ones of language and conceptual clarity rather than god/s. — Tom Storm
A paradox shows the limit of language, not the limit of being. — unenlightened
God had to make shit smell, to prevent folks disappearing up their own arses like the Ouroboros. — unenlightened
category mistake — Hanover
I can't solve it as a paradox, but I can as a sophism! :smile:This is a paradox one might come across if they consider God's omnipotence. If the answer is yes, then there is one thing he can't do (lift a heavy enough rock), which contradicts the definition of omnipotence (being able to do anything). The same applies if the answer is no. How would you solve this paradox? — Cidat
Being unable to fathom God's wisdom is evil, so it leaves us with the same question: why doesn't he delete the evil of our inability to fathom his will? — Angelo Cannata
Or, in other words, my god isn't limited by logic.
That, for me, is the ultimate conversation stopper. Because, if you don't accept reason, why should I reason with you? — ArmChairPhilosopher
I accept reason but do you know logic can be wrong? — SpaceDweller
I think T Clark gave perfect example of what this argument of stone is:And that is what you do when you dismiss the argument of the
stone — ArmChairPhilosopher
Can God make 1 + 1 = 47? — T Clark
In other words, it's an illogical question, nonsense question which forces illogical answer. — SpaceDweller
if we fathom God, that is, God's wisdom, it would make us gods because we would have all the knowledge God has, making us omniscient.
Therefore why do you consider evil to fathom God? because it would not make us Gods or something else? — SpaceDweller
What’s the problem with making us Gods? — Angelo Cannata
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