Questioner
The Equal Omniscience and Omnipotence Argument — Truth Seeker
NotAristotle
Classical free will requires:
the ability to choose otherwise — Truth Seeker
J
The classical problem of evil remains intact. — Truth Seeker
RogueAI
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Questioner
Your view effectively resolves the problem of evil by denying that benevolence is a property of reality at all. But that is not a defense of omnibenevolent theism - it is a rejection of it. — Truth Seeker
agency, intentionality, and moral relevance — Truth Seeker
not a morally accountable God. — Truth Seeker
Once benevolence is dismissed as anthropomorphic, suffering no longer requires justification - but neither does reality deserve moral trust, worship, or praise. — Truth Seeker
At that point, “God” becomes a poetic synonym for nature, not a being to whom moral predicates meaningfully apply. — Truth Seeker
the argument is not answered — Truth Seeker
hypericin
RogueAI
NotAristotle
Jeremy Murray
When I run the thought experiment on myself, try as I may, I can't make myself believe that forgotten (and consequence-less) suffering matters. To whom? But then I'm stopping at the subjective, as you clearly are not. I think different people will have different intuitions about this. — J
J
Modern analysis of trauma often assert that 'trauma is written on the body', or similar propositions. In this conception, 'forgetting' is not even possible? — Jeremy Murray
Bob Ross
If a being is omnipotent, it has the power to bring about any logically possible outcome, including the existence of beings who are equally omniscient and omnipotent. — Truth Seeker
Bob Ross
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
RogueAI
That objection only works if omnipotence is already constrained by the being’s necessary nature. But in that case, omnipotence no longer means the power to bring about all logically possible states of affairs - only those compatible with a specific essence.
The existence of multiple omniscient and omnipotent beings is not logically contradictory in itself; it becomes “impossible” only once additional theological assumptions (such as uniqueness or simplicity) are imposed. Those assumptions are not part of logic, but of a particular model of God.
So premise 2 is not invalidated by necessity alone. Rather, necessity is being used to redefine omnipotence in a restricted way - which concedes the broader point that classical omnipotence cannot be sustained without qualification. — Truth Seeker
J
omnipotence, "all-powerfulness", and "maximally powerful" refer to the same thing in this view; that is, that a being has intrinsic power unrestrained by anything else. — Bob Ross
God is maximally powerful, as innate power itself, which is constrained by metaphysical possibility. — Bob Ross
'omnipotence' . . . it is to have innate power. — Bob Ross
Hey J! Long time no see, my friend. — Bob Ross
NotAristotle
Truth Seeker
Truth Seeker
Ecurb
Premise 4:
A perfectly omnibenevolent being necessarily prefers the outcome that maximizes well-being and minimizes suffering. — Truth Seeker
RogueAI
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