God is logically impossible

 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
But doesn't this assume that gOD's strength is bound by the laws he created and additionally exists at a constant level?
Omnipotence can either be conceived absolutely (which is patently false; God can't make a four-sided triangle) or can be either bound by logic, which is still inconsistent because there are some logical possibilities which exist which blatantly contradict one another.


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But it's not truthful for a single being to state it is two separate things
I didn't claim that, nor am I using the absolutist definition of being able to do anything. There is no logical inconsistency in either proposition that it's possible to truthfully state one thing, which necessarily negates its counterfactual. Therefore, omnipotence as conceived as being able to do all that is logically possible is, in face, incoherent.

It's a contradiction. "Can God truthfully claim to be something he is and something he is not" is self-refuting. It's just an ad nauseam restating of the heavy rock paradox, and it's not consistent with the understanding of god that I'm coming from. There are plenty of logically possible things that God cannot due due to self-imposed limitations. Those don't violate omnipotence because they're intrinsic rather than extrinsic. God cannot sin, lie, etc. So you can argue all day that god can't do all that is logically possible, and I'd agree.

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But you are religious and believe in god. And this thread is about god, which you as a religious person, are defending.
So, what? I'm just not sure what you're trying to say. Why is it a shame that I'm smart (your words) and also religious?
Last Edit: February 03, 2015, 05:55:16 PM by HurtfulTurkey


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
The fact that it's a contradiction is the whole point of the argument. He can either be omnipotent and have a capacity to do all that is logically possible (which is necessarily inconsistent) or he isn't omnipotent.

So you can argue all day that god can't do all that is logically possible, and I'd agree.
So he is, in fact, not omnipotent and my argument is logically sound?

Great.
Last Edit: February 03, 2015, 05:56:09 PM by Meta Cognition


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So you can argue all day that god can't do all that is logically possible, and I'd agree.
So he is, in fact, not omnipotent and my argument is logically sound?

Great.

I don't think your argument is sound, and I disagree with your definition of omnipotence. At that point it's just semantics; "god isn't omnipotent but can basically do anything he wants with some minor restrictions", I'm not sure what that accomplishes.


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the one true God is Doctor Doom and we should all be worshiping him.
Yeah, but in theory an omnipotent deity wouldn't much care about logic.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
So you can argue all day that god can't do all that is logically possible, and I'd agree.
So he is, in fact, not omnipotent and my argument is logically sound?

Great.

I don't think your argument is sound, and I disagree with your definition of omnipotence. At that point it's just semantics; "god isn't omnipotent but can basically do anything he wants with some minor restrictions", I'm not sure what that accomplishes.
I'm using exactly the same definition you are. The fact that God says to himself "Oh, I won't do this" doesn't at all negate the contradiction in having the capacity to do obviously contradictory things.


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uhhh...

- korrie
The universe is omnipotent, in fact.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
The universe is omnipotent, in fact.
False. Omnipotence necessitates agency.


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uhhh...

- korrie
The universe is omnipotent, in fact.
False. Omnipotence necessitates agency.
The universe could throw a black hole at us for shits and giggles.


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So you can argue all day that god can't do all that is logically possible, and I'd agree.
So he is, in fact, not omnipotent and my argument is logically sound?

Great.

I don't think your argument is sound, and I disagree with your definition of omnipotence. At that point it's just semantics; "god isn't omnipotent but can basically do anything he wants with some minor restrictions", I'm not sure what that accomplishes.
I'm using exactly the same definition you are. The fact that God says to himself "Oh, I won't do this" doesn't at all negate the contradiction in having the capacity to do obviously contradictory things.

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Omnipotence is the power to do all things logically possible.

This isn't my, or really any theologian's definition. I can list logically possible things that God cannot do. Omnipotence describes a power to exert change over things, not an ability to do anything (which is rife with contradiction).


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
This isn't my, or really any theologian's definition


So why did you say:
Quote
I agree with your general idea of omnipotence: it's the unlimited power to enact change within the limits of the laws of logic and physics.

It's the definition of theologians from Aquinas to Swinburne.


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This isn't my, or really any theologian's definition


So why did you say:
Quote
I agree with your general idea of omnipotence: it's the unlimited power to enact change within the limits of the laws of logic and physics.

It's the definition of theologians from Aquinas to Swinburne.

Aquinas says omnipotence covers anything that is not contradictory; no theologian will argue that omnipotence includes the ability to do anything, unqualified. Some will claim that since logic is derived from God, that sin is illogical and therefore not a contradiction. Some will take it further and say that anything that is not divine is inconsistent with logic. The definition I used isn't yours. Again, omnipotence is about power over everything, not the ability to do anything you can put into words. Asking, "Can God turn blue into green" isn't a question of omnipotence, it's just a flawed question.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
. . .
I think I've spotted the discrepancy here actually. I am using Aquinas's definition of omnipotence, which is that A (being omnipotent) can perform B if and only if B is a logically consistent conception of a certain state of affairs. Under this paradigm, a maker making something he cannot lift isn't contradictory and thus I can set out a number of premises which  lead to an essential falsification of Aquinas's idea of omnipotence.

You're using a more modern and restricted definition of omnipotence which is that A can perform B if and only if "A does B" is a logically consistent 'set'. In which case, it avoids the problem of God being able to perform contradictory logical possibilities, since it factors God into the equation itself. I don't particularly like it, but I'm willing to concede the logical validity of your argument here.

The question of whether God can turn blue into green is not the same as my own position, however, as that really is logically impossible. Everything I've set out is a logically possible state of affairs, but you're used a definition which is revised down in scope, essentially. But at this point, whether or not God can turn blue into green is a non-question, since we've worked out the divergence >.>
Last Edit: February 03, 2015, 06:48:01 PM by Meta Cognition


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Aquinas actually states that God's agency is the source of his omnipotence, and that imposes a restriction on the mutual exclusivity of certain actions. God can create an infinitely massive rock (presumably), and God will always be able to enact change on that rock; God cannot make a rock he can't lift because of the exclusivity of the previous statements.

It's a bit of a catch-all argument of his to say that God is omnipotent and can do whatever he wants, and things that are contradictory or otherwise paradoxical are not things that he would want to do. I haven't studied Summa Theologica or Metaphysics (a work by Aristotle, but what Aquinas uses to ground his logical arguments) in years, and I'm not sure how well I'm representing him.

Aquinas is by no means a perfect source of information. His arguments are exhaustive, but many of his long-winded proofs are made irrelevant by simpler, common-sense arguments in modern theology.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
. . .
Would it be fair to say, therefore, that your conception of God's omnipotence is God doing whatever is logically possible within his nature? God cannot do any action which is a logical possibility because is leads to contradictions, but you remedy this by saying God cannot lie (despite this being a logical possibility) because it isn't within God's nature to lie. Therefore, the nature of A makes it logically inconsistent for it to perform B?

So, God can't create an immovable object, because it isn't within his nature to do so?


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. . .
Would it be fair to say, therefore, that your conception of God's omnipotence is God doing whatever is logically possible within his nature? God cannot do any action which is a logical possibility because is leads to contradictions, but you remedy this by saying God cannot lie (despite this being a logical possibility) because it isn't within God's nature to lie. Therefore, the nature of A makes it logically inconsistent for it to perform B?

So, God can't create an immovable object, because it isn't within his nature to do so?

Yeah, I have so far avoided using the phrase "in his nature" because that typically results in eye rolls and dismissing the argument. I see it as valid, but it also feels like a lazy way out of a discussion of logic. But yeah, I think Aquinas would also have used that phrasing. He does say that God's omnipotence is derived from and characterized by his nature. And that's where you get arguments that try to frame those contradictions and possible-impossibilities such as God lying or sinning as illogical.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
. . .
Would it be fair to say, therefore, that your conception of God's omnipotence is God doing whatever is logically possible within his nature? God cannot do any action which is a logical possibility because is leads to contradictions, but you remedy this by saying God cannot lie (despite this being a logical possibility) because it isn't within God's nature to lie. Therefore, the nature of A makes it logically inconsistent for it to perform B?

So, God can't create an immovable object, because it isn't within his nature to do so?

Yeah, I have so far avoided using the phrase "in his nature" because that typically results in eye rolls and dismissing the argument. I see it as valid, but it also feels like a lazy way out of a discussion of logic. But yeah, I think Aquinas would also have used that phrasing. He does say that God's omnipotence is derived from and characterized by his nature. And that's where you get arguments that try to frame those contradictions and possible-impossibilities such as God lying or sinning as illogical.
Isn't that just tautological, though?

1. God's "nature" is omnipotent.

2. Omnipotence is doing whatever is logically possible within God's nature.

What is God's nature?

1. God's nature is omnipotent. . .


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God's nature is divine, and his omnipotence is characterized by that nature. Assume that there was a second omnipotent being (for all I know, there could be) --  I don't think it's inconsistent to say that God's omnipotence is defined by his divinity, or holiness, or whatever you want to say, but also say that another omnipotent being's power could be defined by something else, which we'd need some basis to describe. I don't really want to go down that rabbit hole, but all I [think] I'm saying is that omnipotence doesn't necessitate divinity, and neither does divinity necessitate omnipotence, so it's not tautological.



 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
God's nature is divine, and his omnipotence is characterized by that nature. Assume that there was a second omnipotent being (for all I know, there could be) --  I don't think it's inconsistent to say that God's omnipotence is defined by his divinity, or holiness, or whatever you want to say, but also say that another omnipotent being's power could be defined by something else, which we'd need some basis to describe. I don't really want to go down that rabbit hole, but all I [think] I'm saying is that omnipotence doesn't necessitate divinity, and neither does divinity necessitate omnipotence, so it's not tautological.
Okay, that makes sense.


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ITT People debating the meaning of a word


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Some things seem impossible when you think of them, like a planet forming, or the universe, physics, the vastness of space, etc...

But if we filmed where the very first humans 24/7 and how they developed with cameras there'd be no great mystery there.


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
ITT People debating the meaning of a word
M8 do u even Wittgenstein

That's 70pc of all philosophy.


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We always say to fight fire, you must use fire. This is wrong. Fighting fire with fire will leave scars and a new flame will rise. We must instead use water. It is the opposite of fire, it extinguishes the fire, it cools, it refreshes, it heals. We are made up of 70% water, we are not made up of 70% fire. Please practice what we truly are
P1: God is omnipotent.

P2: Omnipotence is the power to do all things logically possible.

P3: Something is logically possible is any coherent action which can be expressed without contradiction.
3a: Any action which has ever been done before is logically possible.

P4: It is logically possible to create a finite mass of rock that cannot be lifted by its own maker (from P3).

P5: Therefore, an omnipotent being can create a finite mass of rock which cannot be lifted by its own maker (from P2 & P4).

P6: Therefore, an omnipotent being can create a finite mass of rock which cannot be lifted by an omnipotent being.

P7: For any finite mass of rock, it is logically possible to generate a force that will lift it against a uniform gravitational field (2nd Law of Motion).

P8: Therefore, an omnipotent being can lift any finite mass of rock (from P2 and P7).

P9: Premise 6 and Premise 8 are contradictions.

P10: Therefore, it is logically impossible to be omnipotent.

C: Therefore, God is logically impossible.
This logic is undeniable! That's why I admire you Meta. Now, let's do reincarnation next.


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emigrate or degenerate. the choice is yours
ITT: Semantics wars


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ITT: Semantics wars

Well duh. That's like walking into a 2001 thread and saying "ITT: sci fi."


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ITT: Semantics wars

Semantics aren't necessarily pointless. There's a lot of value in determining the actual position other people take in a discussion, and topics of logic are by definition topics of semantics.
Last Edit: February 04, 2015, 09:19:27 AM by HurtfulTurkey


 
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This is the way the world ends. Not with a bang but a whimper.
I feel I should restate the fact that I am not, and indeed cannot, disproving the existence of a creator deity. "God exists"  is a synthetic proposition with empirical content not falsifiable by logic alone. Indeed, analytic propositions and deduction can only tell us about the relations between certain ideas.

All my argument shows is that our conception of an omnipotent God (defined as A being able to perform B if and only if B is a logically possible state of affairs) is necessarily contradictory and therefore, by definition, not possible. All this shows is that either our conception of God or ommipotence is necessarily wrong and must be revised to some degree.

Turkey's conception of omnipotence, which is increasingly popular but poorly formulated--largely due to the sheer similarity--essentially factors God into the equation and defines omnipotence as A being able to do B if and only if A doing B is a logically coherent situation. I think this has its own problems, and I'm not convinced its entirely commensurate with Scripture, but that's not the conception of omnipotence being disproved.
Last Edit: February 04, 2015, 09:57:28 AM by Meta Cognition


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Well, scripture never describes God as specifically omnipotent; I think it would be hard for people back then to think in those terms. He's described as all-powerful, almighty, and having power over all things, but is simultaneously said to be unable/unwilling to do certain things. So, I'd take it with a grain of salt.


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ITT: Semantics wars
THAT'S RACI--oh. my bad.


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ITT: Semantics wars

Semantics aren't necessarily pointless. There's a lot of value in determining the actual position other people take in a discussion, and topics of logic are by definition topics of semantics.
The definition of omnipotence isn't really subjective though, is it?