These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
Questions for Christians
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- southern cross
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Re: Questions for Christians
Post #2We know what the answer would be. Yes, God is omnipotent. Is this leading up to the "can God make the impossible possible" type questions?southern cross wrote: These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
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Re: Questions for Christians
Post #3Not at all.Bust Nak wrote:We know what the answer would be. Yes, God is omnipotent. Is this leading up to the "can God make the impossible possible" type questions?southern cross wrote: These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
I am simply trying to supply the baseline for a discussion.
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Re: Questions for Christians
Post #4Any 'quantifying' renders an answer void?southern cross wrote:These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
I don't think we need to be Christians to point out problems with the black and white thinking you are espousing here. For starters, if you demand a simple yes/no answer, at the very least you ought to properly define your term 'omnipotent.'
From the roots omni (all) potent (power), do you mean 'having all power there is'?
Do you mean 'having power to do all things logically possible'?
Do you mean 'having power to do anything whatsover'?
Re: Questions for Christians
Post #5yessouthern cross wrote: These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
Re: Questions for Christians
Post #6By default it has to be "to do anything" because human logic fails when debating God. Even though people can't accept that fact and need that fact to be false in order to dismiss God as a being.Mithrae wrote:Any 'quantifying' renders an answer void?southern cross wrote:These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
I don't think we need to be Christians to point out problems with the black and white thinking you are espousing here. For starters, if you demand a simple yes/no answer, at the very least you ought to properly define your term 'omnipotent.'
From the roots omni (all) potent (power), do you mean 'having all power there is'?
Do you mean 'having power to do all things logically possible'?
Do you mean 'having power to do anything whatsover'?
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Re: Questions for Christians
Post #7How can 'Logic fails when debating God' be distinguished from 'I can claim anything I want because I have no evidence one way or another, and can make it up as I go'?Rkrause wrote:By default it has to be "to do anything" because human logic fails when debating God. Even though people can't accept that fact and need that fact to be false in order to dismiss God as a being.Mithrae wrote:Any 'quantifying' renders an answer void?southern cross wrote:These questions will only come one at a time. If you attempt to quantify the question then your answer will be void.
The first very EASY question:
Is god omnipotent?
I don't think we need to be Christians to point out problems with the black and white thinking you are espousing here. For starters, if you demand a simple yes/no answer, at the very least you ought to properly define your term 'omnipotent.'
From the roots omni (all) potent (power), do you mean 'having all power there is'?
Do you mean 'having power to do all things logically possible'?
Do you mean 'having power to do anything whatsover'?
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�
Steven Novella
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Post #8
From Post 4:
What 'logic' lies in, "God's all powerful, only he lacks the power to do that which he can't do"?Mithrae wrote: From the roots omni (all) potent (power), do you mean 'having all power there is'?
Do you mean 'having power to do all things logically possible'?
Do you mean 'having power to do anything whatsover'?
I might be Teddy Roosevelt, but I ain't.
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Post #9
I don't understand your question. You seem to be talking about semantics, not logic; ie, asking (like I am) what 'all powerful' is supposed to mean.JoeyKnothead wrote:From Post 4:What 'logic' lies in, "God's all powerful, only he lacks the power to do that which he can't do"?Mithrae wrote:From the roots omni (all) potent (power), do you mean 'having all power there is'?
Do you mean 'having power to do all things logically possible'?
Do you mean 'having power to do anything whatsover'?
If God is 'omnipotent,' surely she can create a completely immovable rock, one that even she cannot move; but if God is 'omnipotent,' surely she can move anything, even that rock. That's obviously a logical contradiction. It cannot even be coherently conceived that a being can both move, and not move an object. Is that what Southern Cross meant by 'omnipotent' - having power to do anything whatsoever, however absurd?
If God is 'omnipotent,' then surely he can do things which are utterly unjust, morally contemptible, completely stupid, thoroughly pointless and entirely contrary to his own goals. Those do not entail logical contradictions, but some theists would say that such behaviour would be fundamentally contrary to God's nature. Behaving fundamentally contrary to its own nature might not be a power which exists for anything, whether God, human, animal or object. Is that what Southern Cross meant by 'omnipotent' - having the power to do anything logically possible, anything that can be coherently conceived, but with no constraints of reality/existence or nature?
If God is 'omnipotent,' having all power, then obviously at the very least it must have all power which actually exists. Is that what Southern Cross meant by 'omnipotent' - that whatever 'power' there actually is in reality, God possesses it?
Without clearly explaining what he means by the term 'omnipotent,' his request for a simple yes or no answer to the question "Is God omnipotent?" is meaningless in its ambiguity.
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Post #10
From Post 9:
Lord, if you're up there, and right now I'm hoping ya are, I beg you empower me with the wisdom it takes to even confront this dude, much less refute him.
Do you consider that statement a logical contradiction?
It is my contention that, logically speaking, an inability to do something means that there you sit, you're just inabilitying like all get out.
As you define the terms, is it not that "omni" means "all"?
As you define the terms, is it not that "powerful" means "full of power"?
If so, it is my firm conviction that "all full of power" should mean "all the power".
In this regard then, I propose the declaration that a god is "omnipotent", except for that which he can't do, is as goofy as my declaring I can beat the ol' lady up, but for the fact I can't hit a girl.
Lord, if you're up there, and right now I'm hoping ya are, I beg you empower me with the wisdom it takes to even confront this dude, much less refute him.
Best I can tell, "all" means "all of it", and "powerful", means "full of power" (adhering strictly to common understandings of terms).Mithrae wrote:I don't understand your question. You seem to be talking about semantics, not logic; ie, asking (like I am) what 'all powerful' is supposed to mean.JoeyKnothead wrote: What 'logic' lies in, "God's all powerful, only he lacks the power to do that which he can't do"?
"God can do all, 'cept for that he can't do."Mithrae wrote: If God is 'omnipotent,' surely she can create a completely immovable rock, one that even she cannot move; but if God is 'omnipotent,' surely she can move anything, even that rock. That's obviously a logical contradiction. It cannot even be coherently conceived that a being can both move, and not move an object. Is that what Southern Cross meant by 'omnipotent' - having power to do anything whatsoever, however absurd?
Do you consider that statement a logical contradiction?
Is it not "just" that an omnipotent entity can do the unjust?Mithrae wrote: ...
If God is 'omnipotent,' then surely he can do things which are utterly unjust...
"God is omnipotent, 'cept for that which is contrary to his nature" indicates a condition of not being near as 'omnipotent', as proud about how he won't do what it is he ain't proud to do.Mithrae wrote: ...
Those do not entail logical contradictions, but some theists would say that such behaviour would be fundamentally contrary to God's nature.
So we stop using, "omnipotent", and replace it with such as, "can do a sure bunch of stuff, and we're proud of him for it, but only he can't do that bunch of it he can't do."Mithrae wrote: Behaving fundamentally contrary to its own nature might not be a power which exists for anything, whether God, human, animal or object.
I prefer not to speak on behalf of others regarding this matter. Hopefully ya see I ain't just trying to dodge ya here, but that I only seek to defend my own arguments.Mithrae wrote: Is that what Southern Cross meant by 'omnipotent' - having the power to do anything logically possible, anything that can be coherently conceived, but with no constraints of reality/existence or nature?
It is my contention that, logically speaking, an inability to do something means that there you sit, you're just inabilitying like all get out.
And therein lies the rub - "God can do it all, only he can't do all of that that he can't do!"Mithrae wrote: If God is 'omnipotent,' having all power, then obviously at the very least it must have all power which actually exists.
I was and am trying to hold directly to how you defined it (realizing we're mixing conversations here, but I still think my position relevant).Mithrae wrote: ...
Without clearly explaining what he means by the term 'omnipotent,' his request for a simple yes or no answer to the question "Is God omnipotent?" is meaningless in its ambiguity.
As you define the terms, is it not that "omni" means "all"?
As you define the terms, is it not that "powerful" means "full of power"?
If so, it is my firm conviction that "all full of power" should mean "all the power".
In this regard then, I propose the declaration that a god is "omnipotent", except for that which he can't do, is as goofy as my declaring I can beat the ol' lady up, but for the fact I can't hit a girl.
I might be Teddy Roosevelt, but I ain't.
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