If anyone could prove the existence of God, there would be very few atheists. — Hyper
If you have some supposed deduction that concludes "contradiction is truth", then your argument is invalid.If you accept God itself is a being with omnipotence, omniscience and omnipresence, then it is not a contradiction. In the world of God itself under this definition, even contradiction is truth. — Corvus
If you have some supposed deduction that concludes "contradiction is truth", then your argument is invalid. — Relativist
If you have some supposed deduction that concludes "contradiction is truth", then your argument is invalid. — Relativist
Your conclusion contradicts the law of non-contradiction. That makes it a fallacy, even though it has a valid form.If God is omnipotent, then God can turn contradiction into truth.
God is omnipotent. (under the definition)
Therefore God can turn contradiction into truth. — Corvus
The point was just to demonstrate how the valid logical arguments can have unsound conclusion, and not useful in practicality.Your conclusion contradicts the law of non-contradiction. That makes it a fallacy, even though it has a valid form. — Relativist
There's also a pragmatic problem with your first premise: in deductive logic, the conclusion follows necessarily from the premises. Your premise implies conclusions are not necessarily true, because there's always a background contingency on God's will. This invalidates the use of deductive logic - so the argument is self-defeating. — Relativist
It was a possible scenario post when you chose the definition of God with omnipotence. It was not my own definition of God.
Uummm... I was pointing out that humans invented the concept of omnipotent gods relatively recently, that is: for a long time gods weren't omnipotent. Thus it isn't MY choosing a single "scenario". — LuckyR
From a functional standpoint god definitions are essentially subjective, since each religion, and each worshipper within the religion, gets to decide what THEIR god means to them, essentially their "definition" of god, that you are focused upon. Just as we all decide what we find beautiful, we all get to decide what our god is or isn't like. — LuckyR
Since subjectivity exists in human minds, not in the objective universe, "proving" subjective entities "exist" is possible, yet meaningless. I'm convinced beauty exists, so does my neighbor, BUT what I find beautiful is totally different from what he does. We're both "right", yet being so correct doesn't further anyone's understanding of anything. It's just a word game, leading nowhere. — LuckyR
You're arguing that God is the word God and not the word God, which is a contradiction. — night912
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