Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
03-04-2003, 01:40 AM | #101 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: San Diego, California
Posts: 719
|
Quote:
|
|
03-04-2003, 06:01 AM | #102 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,751
|
Thomas,
Quote:
- to make a sphere - to make a cube - to meet a married person - to meet a bachelor None of these is logically impossible, when taken analogously to your last two examples. It's only when you conjoin the incompatible properties that they become logical impossibilities. Just as "to learn something" and "to be necessarily omniscient" are jointly incompatible. Quote:
Quote:
|
|||
03-04-2003, 07:07 AM | #103 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: somewhere
Posts: 684
|
quote:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Originally posted by Magus55 You will NEVER get rid of Christianity. Christianity will exist till the end of the world. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- But humans change. A persons belief in the supernatural tends to be inversely related to their intelligence. It is already difficult for intelligent educated individuals to buy into the various bits of nonsense that christianity peddles. What would happen were the average IQ of the general population to rise a couple of points? |
03-04-2003, 07:11 AM | #104 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Canada
Posts: 3,751
|
...indeed, this is just a specific case of the general incompatibility of "already being X" and "coming to be X". That is, one cannot both be dead and die; be in Chicago and making one's way to Chicago; be 30 years old and then turn 24; or know everything and then learn something.
I can see taking a definition of omnipotence upon which such inabilities count as failures of omnipotence. But I can't see distinguishing these cases from the spherical cube cases. |
03-04-2003, 12:47 PM | #105 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Boulder, CO
Posts: 1,009
|
Originally posted by Clutch :
Quote:
Quote:
a person S is omnipotent iff for every task T, _________ Now all you have to do is fill in the blank, or reject the framework I've provided. |
||
03-04-2003, 01:26 PM | #106 | |
Banned
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Scotland, UK
Posts: 602
|
Influence of Gods
Quote:
People did not live in fear of a God who kills. As a result people didn't feel that they had to get the priest's permission to think or opine on politics or science. They accepted the spherical world of the Ancient Greeks if they wanted or the Flat Earth of other cults. It didn't matter. After Christianity overthrew the old religions and took over the Empire, they presented a far different god. Their god would tolerate no others. Their god might kill you in fit of spite. Their god could send you to Hell for an eternity of burning. This began the era of the very feared god. A good Christian was one who was terrified of his God, hence the term "God - fearing" which over time was twisted into a dark comment. The fear of a violent killer God is why in Islamic/Christian cultures, the frightening killer God as presented by his spokesmen (Priests, Preachers, Imams, Ayatollahs, Mullahs) hve such influence. The most powerful influence there is, is fear itself. (thanks to President FDR for the paraphrasing of his quote.) Fiach |
|
03-04-2003, 01:56 PM | #107 | |
Regular Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Florida, USA
Posts: 363
|
Another country heard from.
Quote:
But oddly enough, an omniscient being learning something is more like the spherical cube case than even your arguments let on. If learning is described as adding a fact previously unknown to a knowledge pool to that knowledge pool, then the problem isn't that our omnibeing can't add fact X to its knowledge pool, where fact X is a fact not previously known to the omnibeing. If it was a problem of an omnibeing not being able to do something which any person could do, namely, learn fact X, then this would be a genuine objection. But the thing is that nobody can learn fact X, even in principle, because fact X does not exist. Fact X is a logical impossibility. As such, it is not a limitation on an omnibeing's power that it cannot learn it just as it is not a limitation on an omnibeing's power to create a spherical cube. This whole confusion results from the reflexive nature of the verb learn. If reflexive verbs like this are used then it is easy to create scenarios that "contradict" omnipotence. An example or two: "Answer the following question truthfully in the affirmative: 'I am not omnipotent.'", "Determine a logically possible task that you cannot accomplish." Now any non-omnipotent entity can easily complete the above tasks, but an omnipotent one can't. However, if the reflexive portions of the above sentences are replaced with specific targets, then the apparent contradiction is eliminated. Thomas Metcalf, I think your McEar and McNothing examples are invalidated by the framework I've provided. Peace. |
|
03-04-2003, 02:15 PM | #108 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Boulder, CO
Posts: 1,009
|
Re: Another country heard from.
Originally posted by Wizardry :
(Suppose our alleged omnibeing is McNothing, the being who can't perform any action at all.) Quote:
Quote:
So McNothing is omnipotent. I really think you should present an alternate analysis of "omnipotence" so you don't have to accept that absurd conclusion. Maybe make use of the framework I provided for Clutch above. If you do, you'll see very clearly how McEar and McNothing preclude the analysis you seem to be using. Quote:
|
|||
03-04-2003, 02:49 PM | #109 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: USA
Posts: 7,204
|
Re: Another country heard from.
Shrug, most Christians don't fear God except maybe out of respect. We love God and want to be as close as possible to him. The apostles didn't really fear Jesus other than his power and not being worthy to be in his presence, but Jesus didn't teach love, peace, and caring to people to get them to flee from him in terror. |
03-05-2003, 11:32 AM | #110 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Colorado Springs
Posts: 6,471
|
Quote:
This I know For the bible tells me so Those who fear him not will die In torment, eternal fire If you don't fear him, Magus, bring the marshmallows. The bible doesn't give you any wiggle room on the fear requirement. You just stumbled across one of the psychological impossibilities demanded by the god of the bible: LOVE and FEAR him. At least, it's a psychological impossibility for me. I cannot love anyone I fear. The closest I am capable of coming is being afraid to not love them, which isn't the same thing. d |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|