The whole is divided potentially, not actually. So to assume that the whole actually is parts is a category mistake. — Metaphysician Undercover
The distinction I'm making is a semantic one, and is accurate. — Michael
Creating an impenetrable shield isn't doable in principle, so it doesn't affect its omnipotence. — Πετροκότσυφας
"Partly" implies division such that true and not true are not said of the same thing, they are said of different parts, the parts being different parts of the same thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
But why? Why should U take precedence over O? — Chany
Why not? — lambda
So, the creation of an unstoppable spear excludes the creation of an impenetrable shield. — Πετροκότσυφας
No, I'm saying that the most powerful being is not necessarily an all-powerful being. — Michael
And I'm saying that if an omniscient being exists then U isn't possible. So your claim that U is possible begs the question by assuming that an omniscient being doesn't exist. — Michael
If U can't be known at all, then how can we talk about U — Chany
If multiple all-powerful beings are perfectly united in will and purpose then they can co-exist together without destroying one another. — lambda
None of the numbered points follow from the postulate you gave — noAxioms
Yes, but the converse isn't true. The most powerful being might not be all-powerful. — Michael
If it's partly true and partly false, and if false isn't true, then it's partly true and partly not true. — Michael
There is if there's an omniscient being. So your argument begs the question. You have to assume that there isn't an omniscient being to claim that an unknown thing is possible. — Michael
it knows absolutely everything, even if that means an infinite number of things. — BlueBanana
U contradicts itself. — Chany
But not all gods are omnipotent. — BlueBanana
If they're postulates, they're mutually contradictory and thus proof of nothing. — noAxioms
It's only really in monotheistic religions that God is all-powerful, but given that the central tenet of such beliefs is that there's just a single, all-powerful god, your argument here is redundant — Michael
God can want for nothing else god would not be omnipotent. — charleton
If something is all powerful then it can do anything. If something is the most powerful then it can do more than anything else – but not necessarily everything. — Michael
No, contradictions are not allowed under the "all-powerful" definition. — Πετροκότσυφας
Under that definition, why can't there be two all-powerful beings? — Πετροκότσυφας
Because you define it that way. — BlueBanana
So how much does O know? It knows everything, and the amount of information is infinite — BlueBanana
You're right. Forgiveness is essential to God's nature. However, if everything can be forgiven then there's no difference between good and bad. But the distinction good and bad is also an essential nature of God. A paradox. One of the following has to be discarded:If God is good he forgives — BlueBanana
Even if the reasoning was correct, only bad people would go to Hell, not non-believers. — BlueBanana
I assumed you were alluding to unlimited power. You were not. So, why did you object to my definition of omnipotence?Omnipotent = All-powerful, not "the most powerful".
But if you choose to define them in a contradictory fashion, then they're not possible (assuming that contradictions are not possible). It's all really a matter of definition. If your definitions are incoherent, you can't do much with them. — Πετροκότσυφας
Two omnipotent beings contradict each other's omnipotence, this is true — BlueBanana
Omnipotent = All-powerful, not "the most powerful". — Πετροκότσυφας
What does it even mean for a god or God to be alive or dead? Are gods or God biological beings — Πετροκότσυφας
According to some. — BlueBanana
O and U contradict each other, so one doesn't exist. Why not U? — BlueBanana
O has infinite knowledge, it's a part of its definition. — BlueBanana
What is a better question is, how does O know it's O — BlueBanana
However, I disagree that there is no good in death, as I stated before — Anonymys
But what if there is something good in dying? — Anonymys
think induction is pragmatic not truth bearing. — Andrew4Handel
Observed events are everything; if only we would keep to them rather than fill our world's with made up shit we'd be a lot better off. — charleton
Biological life exists, but it does not lead to a "meaning of life" of the kind that we are looking for. If you do pick a "meaning of life" of the kind that we are looking for, — absoluteaspiration
you are left with definitions of life like vitality or totality. But if you pick those definitions, then life does not exist. — absoluteaspiration
Having a definition of "unicorn" doesn't absolve you of the responsibility to argue for their existence. Why should it be different for life? — absoluteaspiration
What is your definition of life? — absoluteaspiration
Where is the argument that life exists? — absoluteaspiration
Some people use life to mean "everything". This other definition of life is addressed in point 2. — absoluteaspiration
1. Science no longer believes in vital principles or vital energies. Therefore, that kind of life doesn't exist. — absoluteaspiration
2. As for life in the sense of "everything", I believe in the Godelian chain of argumentation that there is no universal set. So life in the sense of totality doesn't exist either. — absoluteaspiration
ok, so you should also always assume there is an alien under your bed, going to eat you. so never get off the bed, its the only practical conclusion. — PeterPants