We cannot possibly comprehend anything outside of the limitations of our own perception. If something were to be "outside" of time or the universe, we could not understand it or say anything about it whatsoever. This is not to say that it's not possible, only that trying to apply our own universal laws and constraints to it is nonsensical. To talk of an entity outside of time being unable to decide isn't logical because the concept of decision itself is a product of the universe we live in and how it operates. Even thinking of God having a mind doesn't make sense if He is outside of time. It seems to me, if you believe in a creator God who is separate from the universe, you cannot say a single thing about what He is like. If you want to be able to say anything about God, any of His characteristics, He must be part of our universe. But that would mean He did not create our universe. The only other option is something like Spinoza's God, which is the universe. Everything that exists, mind and matter, is an extension of God, a part of Him, like cells in a body. I recommend reading his Ethics if this sounds interesting to you, or at the very least finding a good summary of it online. — JustSomeGuy
"God is in state of timeless where there is no before and after (this is true since time is part of creation)."
Does God not have a before and after? It seems to me he must have a sequence of events. On what basis would God be denied such a reality? Assuming God existed before creation, then time must have existed before creation. I would propose that time is the one understanding that he could not create, but rather ran concurrent throughout the eternity of his existence. For those who say he is all knowing, time is the one item beyond his all-powerfulness. The only power he could have over it is the power of suicide. He could permanently kill himself and thereby destroy that time which is limited to his existence. But any time existing beyond his existence (i.e. time he allowed beyond his existence) would be unaffected. — curiosity in action
God is not restrained by time, nor is time necessary for His existence. Yes, I agree that one is either timeless or temporal, but that statement does not apply to God. It is like saying a potter must be a pot to create pots. It is absurd. — Lone Wolf
An object is abstract (if and) only if it is causally inefficacious. — Abstract Objects, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
I think we can understand timeless. — bahman
Lots of assumptions and presumptions. I count nine; how many do you count. Now what do you suppose a conclusion based on so many assumptions is worth?
— tim wood
It doesn't matter how many assumption we have. Assumptions must however be coherent. — bahman
Why do you think this? Don't just make a claim, provide your reasoning.
I don't think it makes sense for us to be able to understand something that we have zero experience of. Our brains aren't capable of comprehending a lack of time, just like they aren't capable of understanding infinity. — JustSomeGuy
Think of one instant. It is just a point. There is no before and after in it. — bahman
In fact, time would continue to exist even if absolutely no change was occurring. — CasKev
Time is really a measurement of change, isn't it? — JustSomeGuy
I think time can measure how long something stays the same too. Imagine the entire universe perished into nothingness, in some sort of reverse big bang. Then at some point, a new big bang occurred, out of which something emerged from nothingness. Surely, time could be said to be passing between those two events, even though nothing existed for a certain duration (i.e. non-changing nothingness existed for 2 years)? — CasKev
To me, it would make way more sense for nothing to have ever existed. But here we are — CasKev
The very definition of the term "instant" is "a precise moment of time". How is "a moment of time" the same as "no time"? It clearly isn't. — JustSomeGuy
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