Not easily communicable? — Heister Eggcart
And perhaps not at all.
Who here is failing to make this communication of the truth, God? — Heister Eggcart
Let me ask you a question: do you think the truth is capable of being exhaustively expressed in language? If you answer in the affirmative, then, if I asked you to express it and you declined, you would either know the truth and are merely withholding it from us for some reason or you would be obliged to say that we haven't yet discovered it all. But then notice in the case of the latter that it takes a leap of faith to believe that the truth can be exhaustively communicated through language in the future,
since it hasn't happened yet. If you answer in the negative, then you already admit the existence of mystery and of the possibility of God, if he exists, to disclose certain truths, such as those about suffering, by means that are not easily or not at all capable of being communicated.
Aye, arguments that are put forward in words that are in favor of something which words can't make intelligible. — Heister Eggcart
An odd complaint. Can words ever make anything fully intelligible? All words are generalized, mediated abstractions from perception, not to mention wherever else they may derive.
God does indeed violate a being's will, in that he denies one's will to ever be and never to not be — Heister Eggcart
But this is incoherent. There couldn't be a will to be or not to be, for that entails that an agent exist before he can decide to exist, which is impossible.
I do think that if you rule out talking about unborn children, you ought to rule out the strangeness of talking about "yourself" after you'd already be dead. — Heister Eggcart
"Unborn child" is a category that exists, provided we're talking about fetuses and embryos. But yes, I do deny that there exists anyone to consent or not consent to being born, for the same reason given above. That being said, I don't why you think this then entails my ruling out one's existence after death,
unless you assume that death results in non-existence. In other words, if death results in non-existence, then positing an afterlife would amount to saying that it is possible to exist after you exist, which is just as impossible as existing before you exist. But I don't say that death necessarily results in non-existence. I haven't made up my mind, and whatever conclusion I reach, I couldn't ever know for sure until I died.