you really are quite clever, ashy
Quote from: Doom DH on February 03, 2015, 04:18:10 PMyou really are quite clever, ashyI should point out that, while I have expressed the same idea before, it wasn't me who structured the argument into the various premises.
Why do you limit an omnipotent agent's abilities to only those logically possible in p2?
While we're on this subject, how do you feel about the watchmaker analogy?
Quote from: Kupo on February 03, 2015, 04:32:03 PMWhile we're on this subject, how do you feel about the watchmaker analogy?Utter shit.
<omnipotence paradox>
P4: It is logically possible to create a finite mass of rock that cannot be lifted by its own maker (from P3).
Quote from: RC on February 03, 2015, 04:37:46 PMWhy do you limit an omnipotent agent's abilities to only those logically possible in p2? That's the standard definition of omnipotence.
This is about as robust of an argument as saying, "it's logically possible to not be omnipotent, and omnipotence is the ability to do anything logically possible, therefore god cannot exist".
Regardless of the word's meaning, your argument doesn't disprove god, just a god with the arbitrarily-imposed restriction of operating within logic.
QuoteP4: It is logically possible to create a finite mass of rock that cannot be lifted by its own maker (from P3). This is about as robust of an argument as saying, "it's logically possible to not be omnipotent, and omnipotence is the ability to do anything logically possible, therefore god cannot exist".This is a delightful attempt at a logical process, but...c'mon, man.
Quote from: RC on February 03, 2015, 04:47:05 PMRegardless of the word's meaning, your argument doesn't disprove god, just a god with the arbitrarily-imposed restriction of operating within logic.Duh. That's literally right there in the premises.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 03, 2015, 04:50:10 PMQuote from: RC on February 03, 2015, 04:47:05 PMRegardless of the word's meaning, your argument doesn't disprove god, just a god with the arbitrarily-imposed restriction of operating within logic.Duh. That's literally right there in the premises. dat thread title tho
QuoteP4: It is logically possible to create a finite mass of rock that cannot be lifted by its own maker (from P3). This
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on February 03, 2015, 04:46:43 PMQuoteP4: It is logically possible to create a finite mass of rock that cannot be lifted by its own maker (from P3). ThisAlso, you're going to want to show why that's logically impossible if you want to defend the principle of omnipotence. Omnipotence necessarily relies on unrestricted comprehension, which is nonsensical. The list of what God can do can either by complete (assuming a capacity to perform all logical possibilities) or consistent--never both.
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 a shame Turkey and Gojira are religious. They're such smart dudes.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on February 03, 2015, 05:22:18 PMI 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.Then we needn't use the rocks; it still runs into the same problem which, generally, is Russell's Paradox. You need only list of all the logically possible actions to find that such a list would also be inconsistent. It is logically possible to both truthfully state your name is Yahweh and truthfully state your name is not Yahweh, and yet doing one clearly negates a capacity to do the other.
But it's not truthful for a single being to state it is two separate things