Childishness — ZzzoneiroCosm
I agree with Einstein: "Spinoza's God" (maybe!) As I've recently replied to you ↪180 Proof. — 180 Proof
Only an "omnibenevolent" deity seems worthy of worship — 180 Proof
Do you use it to mean what philosophers of religion use it to denote, namely an omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent person? — Bartricks
This is a ridiculously ignorant assertion and the end of this exchange. — ZzzoneiroCosm
So "we worship only" the unworthy – ergo the world we've made for ourselvse these last dozen or so millennia. :mask:What about the fact that at the human level, we worship only the powerful... — Agent Smith
So "we worship only" the unworthy – ergo the world we've made for ourselvse these last dozen or so millennia. :mask: — 180 Proof
A [1]man always has two reasons for doing anything: a good reason and the real reason. — J. P. Morgan
Yes. As I saySo it basically boils down to our insecurities; natural theology (the rational arm of religion) is simply us trying to rationalize what is, all said and done, nothing more than wishful thinking — Agent Smith
"God" is an anxiety (like death), not an entity. — 180 Proof
God" is an anxiety (like death), not an entity. — 180 Proof
Hey, Bartricks, just out of curiosity, if God can do anything, can he score a goal in tennis?
Or can he score a hundred runs in Chess?
What about a home run in Poker? — Banno
God cannot create such a stone. — SwampMan
But this is not a limitation on his power because "a stone that cannot be lifted by an omnipotent being" is a logical contradiction, a non-thing. — SwampMan
The two examples aren’t analogous. The possibility of marriage doesn’t affect the man’s bachelorhood, whereas the possibility of being unable to lift a stone does affect the claim of God’s omnipotence. — AJJ
Being unable to divest himself of his omnipotence isn’t a deficiency if no such power exists. — AJJ
How does being able to do something imply a 'lack' of power rather than possession of one? — Bartricks
By your account, if god can do anything, then god can even do things that do not make sense to god, not just to me.God is in charge of what does and does not make sense. — Bartricks
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