You need not supply the reason why your statements are valid in the first place, but I must supply the reason why they are not? — Patterner
Can you support this? I an not familiar enough with beings of force and spirit to know why they cannot die/cease to be.force and spirit is outside of the boundary of physical death. — Corvus
Can you clarify this? I don't know why an omnipotent being could not kill itself. If its idea of "winning" is no longer existing, could it not make that possible?Omnipotence means that it is powerful to win, resist or make anything possible. If omnipotent being could be killed either by itself or others, then it means that the omnipotent being was not omnipotent — Corvus
Can you support this? I an not familiar enough with beings of force and spirit to know why they cannot die/cease to be. — Patterner
Can you clarify this? I don't know why an omnipotent being could not kill itself. If its idea of "winning" is no longer existing, could it not make that possible? — Patterner
Yes, I did. I am no longer saying they are invalid, and have not said it in several posts. Can we move on?You definitely said they are invalid. Hence this talking is going on now. — Corvus
Ok, they are not to be clarified, they are to be verified. How do you propose to verify whether they are right or wrong? What is the method of achieving verification? Would it involve saying why you make these assumptions? Or saying anything whatsoever beyond making the original statements? Or is stating the assumptions the beginning and end of the verification process?Why should assumption be supported or clarified? Assumptions are made so they could be either verified to be right or wrong. — Corvus
Ok cool :up:Yes, I did. I am no longer saying they are invalid, and have not said it in several posts. Can we move on? — Patterner
According to my logic book, you can make any assumptions in proof so long as they are relevant and within the context, and would help coming to the sound conclusion.How do you propose to verify whether they are right or wrong? What is the method of achieving verification? — Patterner
I would say this depends on the particular belief system. For example, the Bible says man was made in God's image, and that Adam and Eve hid when they heard the sound of God walking in the Garden. So it is possible some people believe God was in human form. In Marvel comics, the omnipotent being known as the Beyonder put himself in human form. I don't know of a reason an omnipotent being could not be in human form. Do you?But then is God in bodily existence just like humans? No, my reasoning tells me it isn't. If God was a biological bodily existence, then s/he will get old and die just like humans. — Corvus
However, stipulating a hypothesized omnipotent being is not in human form, but is "force and spirit," I am not aware of a reason this being would not be able to die. Or, if this being cannot be said to be "alive" in the first place, but exists, then I am not aware of a reason this being cannot cease to exist. Are you? — Patterner
I would say this depends on the particular belief system. — Patterner
For example, the Bible says man was made in God's image, and that Adam and Eve hid when they heard the sound of God walking in the Garden. So it is possible some people believe God was in human form. In Marvel comics, the omnipotent being known as the Beyonder put himself in human form. I don't know of a reason an omnipotent being could not be in human form. Do you? — Patterner
Is the statement "The force cannot be killed, because it is not a biological bodily existence" an established fact? Perhaps a natural law? If so, I would be interested in hearing about it.From this perspective, God could be a force, which was omnipotent. The force cannot be killed, because it is not a biological bodily existence. Could it kill itself? How can it kill itself, when it is impossible to be killed? — Corvus
Being omnipotent, I would think the being could assume any type of existence it wanted, at any time it wanted, and still be able to do whatever it wanted at any moment. Assume the form of a grain of sand for a million years. Then human form for a billion. Then the form of a cluster of galaxies for a few minutes. Then a solar flare. A rainstorm. On and on. I would think the important aspect of the being at all times, regardless of the form it assumes, is it's omnipotence.First, we need to make clear which God we are talking about, and then what type of existence the God has, before going on to talking about the other properties of God. — Corvus
I do not. Nor do I believe that story actually took place. I also don't believe the Marvel story of the Beyonder.The bible says he is the almighty God, and he has demonstrated some miraculous events in the bible, but do you have any evidence to support that story? — Corvus
No it is not. It is an analogy or inference based on the ancient Egyptian God which is the Sun.Is the statement "The force cannot be killed, because it is not a biological bodily existence" an established fact? Perhaps a natural law? If so, I would be interested in hearing about it. — Patterner
Omnipotence is just one of the alleged properties of God, and before we could discuss about omnipotence, it would be clearer, if you let me know which God you are talking about, and what type of existence your God has.I would think the important aspect of the being at all times, regardless of the form it assumes, is it's omnipotence. — Patterner
That misses the point somewhat! There's no puzzle. There's nothing to discuss.
God is by definition an omnipotent person. So 'of course' they have the ability to kill themselves. Why would you think they don't? — Clearbury
I am not talking about any God/god/deity at all. I am speaking about a hypothetical omnipotent being.Omnipotence is just one of the alleged properties of God, and before we could discuss about omnipotence, it would be clearer, if you let me know which God you are talking about, and what type of existence your God has. — Corvus
I guess it depends on your definition of God. But I'm not talking about that. I'm taking about whether or not an omnipotent being can commit suicide. I don't see why it would not be possible. — Patterner
If you 'define' God as 'someone who can't commit suicide' then you haven't raised a puzzle either, for then 'by definition' God can't commit suicide and the question was like "are squares four sided?" — Clearbury
I take 'God' to mean a person who has the three omni properties (omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence). — Clearbury
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