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01-01-2003, 01:31 PM | #41 |
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That only makes since if humans were some seperate force. But clearly such a being would have had to create humans. Why would he do that in the first place?
it would not be a test (he would already know the outcome) it would not prove anything. It would serve no purpose for him. |
01-01-2003, 09:04 PM | #42 | |
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Indeed, what does god need with a human? As in the movie, any "god" that needed humans would not be a god. Starboy |
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01-02-2003, 03:28 AM | #43 | |
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God & gods
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01-02-2003, 12:09 PM | #44 |
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exactly.
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01-03-2003, 01:31 PM | #45 | ||||||||
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But, then we went to the park and saw the Rose Bowel parade floats and things were better Quote:
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Since God is understood to be a necessary being Who thus exists in all logically possible worlds and Who, furthermore, is sovereign over all that is external to His own nature and not conditioned by any factors external to His nature, if God’s free acts flow inevitably from God’s nature (the set of properties God has in all possible worlds), then there are no logically possible worlds where God chooses to actualize any state of affairs other than the state of affairs which describe what we know to be the actual world. Consequently, there is only one possible world in the logic space and that is the world in which we live. But, if that is the case, any discussion of God choosing between alternate possible worlds or of counterfactuals becomes meaningless. I think the solution to this paradox is along the lines of what Leibniz had to say about it. Since we are asking the question as to why God chose to create this world rather than another one, the whole notion of counterfactuals precedes the question of God’s choices. Thus, when we speak of differing possible worlds we are speaking of a condition logically prior to that in which God has made any choices, a condition in which the divine mind contemplates all that is within the power of divine omnipotence to carry out and the consequences of all conceivable choices which God might make – prior to any teleological evaluation of any of those conceivable choices, on God’s part, in terms of God’s goals or moral ends. But, since differing logical possible worlds include different possible choices on God’s part, God’s choices cannot be said to flow inevitably from God’s nature if, by the term ‘nature’ we are speaking of the properties that a being has in all possible worlds in which it exists. Perhaps a better phrasing would be: “God’s choices flow inevitably from God’s character.” The analogy here would be similar to the manner in which a human being’s nature might be said to be distinguished from his or her character. Since, as human beings, much of our identity is shaped by contingent factors external to ourselves, there are many conceivable characters we might have had if our lives had been different and our character is further subject to change over time as new contingencies are encountered. However (as the very discussion of differing possible characters an individual might have had presupposes), we can still locate a particular individual in differing possible worlds by a larger set of properties – namely that person’s nature – which dictate how that person would have reacted to different possible contingencies and set a range of possible characters which might have been associated with the individual. Consequently, we can distinguish between one’s nature as a broader category which describes an individual in all possible worlds and between one’s character which is a narrower category which varies between possible worlds as a function of one’s nature and contingent circumstances. Of course, God’s ‘character’ differs from human character in that God’s character is not shaped any contingent factors outside of God Himself. Thus, the analogy only works insofar as God’s nature is the means by which God is located transworldy and God’s character is how God is defined in relation to the actual world. There are still technical difficulties to be sorted through even with this phrasing, but given that this discussion is already rather technical, esoteric, and not all that related to the subject matter, I think that is enough for now. Phew!!! Quote:
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God Bless, Kenny |
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01-08-2003, 09:37 AM | #46 |
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I'll reply from Ghana!
Hi Kenny,
I saw your message. I'm just off to Ghana tomorrow morning to teach English for 3 months (I'm feeling a bit nervous about it right now) so I'll try and reply to it from an internet café, but if you don't get any reply for 3 months, don't think its because I just forgot about it! Best wishes, Thomas |
01-15-2003, 08:50 AM | #47 | |||||||
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From Ghana...
Hi Kenny,
I've just got to an internet cafe here in Accra, the capital of Ghana. It's boiling hot and very humid, but a fasinating place (and incredibly religiose, with 'I Believe in God Signs' on every shop; plus, people are always coming up to you and asking whether you're religous! Clearly they don't have atheists here... ) Quote:
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01-15-2003, 10:07 AM | #48 |
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Would a perfect being be creative?
I'm creative. |
02-06-2003, 09:57 AM | #49 | |
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Re: I'll reply from Ghana!
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Good luck in Ghana! It sounds like a really cool opportunity you have. I hope you enjoy your time there and learn new and valuable things about life (as such opportunities usually allow). I haven’t forgotten either, but I have been tied up over at another thread. Still you can expect a response from me sometime in the future. God Bless, Kenny |
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02-07-2003, 07:05 AM | #50 | |
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Re: Re: I'll reply from Ghana!
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Good to hear from you. Believe it or not, I'm logged in to Infidels from an internet cafe in the middle of Teshie Nungua, an outlying estate of Accra, the capital. Thanks for the good luck wish; I'm really enjoying my time here at the moment,and the teaching is going well. It is a real learning experience - particularly on the religion front actually, with the religiosity over here being something else (I don't think they've ever heard of an atheist for the most part! ) I'll look forward to your reply, and maybe evem try to answer it from here, tactically covering up the huge 'Internet Infidels' logo that would appear on my screen! Best wishes, Thomas |
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