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A rock so big, it can't be moved.

FrenchyBearpaw

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This is a tired question. You're asking: "can an omnipotent being create a rock that an omnipotent being can't move." The object in question -- a rock that an omnipotent being can't move -- is a logical impossibility. Like a square circle. So...

We could say "no" because square circles and rocks that omnipotent beings can't move are logical impossibilities. They don't make any sense. Or...

We could say "yes". But if God can break the laws of logic and create a rock that he can't move then there's nothing to stop him from breaking the laws of logic again and moving the rock that he can't move.

Cleared up?

Not in the least.
 
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pjnlsn

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I don't know that I agree with that. I don't mean to say that God IS beyond logic, because I don't honestly think He is, but I don't think it's impossible that some creator deity COULD be beyond logic.

You don't understand what you're saying. Very simply, logic is self-deterministic and nothing is 'beyond' logic.
 
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pjnlsn

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You still have not supported this claim. Seems like you never will. Not only that but it's obvious you don't understand what the fallacy of a loaded question is or how it is more than relevant to your claim. There is no reason to even reply with the same circular reasoning.

What was written was written because it was true, not because it would compare favorably to any external statements, standard, or criteria. That you perceive an intent behind the pointing out of this contradiction does not make it any less or more present.

[Barring differences in how terms are defined between reader and writer,] there's a contradiction between the idea of being omnipotent and being able to create anything, which is part of having all abilities.

If a being is said to be able to create anything, but is also said to have the strength, in whatever form, to manipulate any object, then there are a few actions which cannot be done by the being.

But similarly to before, while the concept of omnipotence has this internal contradiction, an imagined entity which is not all-powerful but rather most powerful, or which is merely defined as having various abstract and ephemeral abilities, doesn't involve this particular contradiction.


The above more or less contains all information that you need to understand the question and the contradiction. Because of various inconsistencies in your responses and the simplicity of applying the above to the specifics of your responses, i'm not really inclined to help you with anything more than the above.
 
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pjnlsn

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This is a tired question. You're asking: "can an omnipotent being create a rock that an omnipotent being can't move." The object in question -- a rock that an omnipotent being can't move -- is a logical impossibility. Like a square circle. So...

We could say "no" because square circles and rocks that omnipotent beings can't move are logical impossibilities. They don't make any sense. Or...

We could say "yes". But if God can break the laws of logic and create a rock that he can't move then there's nothing to stop him from breaking the laws of logic again and moving the rock that he can't move.

Cleared up?

The above supports that there is a contradiction in the idea of omnipotence, rather than dissipating it, if such was your intent. You can say that God can 'break' the laws of logic, but this doesn't mean that the contradiction isn't present either. And obviously that it makes no sense to you doesn't mean that the contradiction isn't present.
 
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pjnlsn

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Then please, tell me what I'm saying.

I mean, it's wrong and you apparently don't understand the relatively simple concept of logic, what the word means. Or perhaps you're inclined to compartmentalize a little when thinking about the gods you believe in.
 
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Gottservant

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Can God make a rock so heavy that he can't lift it, in all contexts?

It's a tough call saying changing context is a semantic solution when the question itself is very obviously a semantic paradox.

But to answer your question, the answer is "no". As I said, God has already said He will fulfil the Law and making a rock so big He cannot lift it does not fulfil the Law. The Law is God must remain all powerful, not God must create all things.

You may invoke the phrase "all things are possible with God" to which I reply that there is a semantic answer to your semantic paradox. Whether you find that satisfactory is entirely your problem!
 
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pjnlsn

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It's a tough call saying changing context is a semantic solution when the question itself is very obviously a semantic paradox.

But to answer your question, the answer is "no". As I said, God has already said He will fulfil the Law and making a rock so big He cannot lift it does not fulfil the Law. The Law is God must remain all powerful, not God must create all things.

You may invoke the phrase "all things are possible with God" to which I reply that there is a semantic answer to your semantic paradox. Whether you find that satisfactory is entirely your problem!

The entire thread is about whether in idea conflicts with another idea, yes, but as you wrote above rephrasing the question to add your contexts makes the answer as it was before.

And let us not speak of this idea personally or definitively, as to the existence of an entity with this characteristic, for it is, as of now, purely conceptual. I.e. God has not 'said' anything, effectively.

All that was said originally by some was the equivalent of:

[Barring differences in how terms are defined between reader and writer,] there's a contradiction between the idea of being omnipotent and being able to create anything, which is part of having all abilities.

If a being is said to be able to create anything, but is also said to have the strength, in whatever form, to manipulate any object, then there are a few actions which cannot be done by the being.


And the 'solution' if you want to call it that, could be phrased like this:

But similarly to before, while the concept of omnipotence has this internal contradiction, an imagined entity which is not all-powerful but rather most powerful, or which is merely defined as having various abstract and ephemeral abilities, doesn't involve this particular contradiction.

Or perhaps what you've written, not of contexts, but of 'the Law,' although your phrasing is apparently designed for more than information conveyance, and for some sort of emotional impact in the reader.
 
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Gottservant

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argh! This is the point: God could create a rock so big that He couldn't lift it, but then He would cease to be all-powerful, hence THE LAW prevents Him from doing it.

If you have a problem with that, take it up with the Law, not with God!

I suggest exploring a similar question, which is designed to expose the fact that the very premise of a contradiction is an anathema to God:

Can God create a contradiction?

The answer is "no". Even mentioning contradiction in the same sentence as God is against the Law, and therefore sin. It's invalid before you even start. Of course you are tempted to mention contradiction in connection with God, but that is not because God is weak or some such thing, it is because you are a sinner.

These are heavy words for someone who has no faith, but it is the truth. The sophistry of contradictions is not of God. God cannot create without the Law since what God creates must be for all time and the only way God can create for all time is if the Law sustains what God creates for all time. Hence there is nothing God creates that is apart from the Law, hence IF THE LAW DOES NOT ALLOW GOD to create CONTRADICTION God cannot do it. THAT IS the Law.
 
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Hawisher

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I mean, it's wrong and you apparently don't understand the relatively simple concept of logic, what the word means. Or perhaps you're inclined to compartmentalize a little when thinking about the gods you believe in.

And now you're no longer paying attention to what I'm saying. I specifically said that I believe God is bound by logic. Specifically and repeatedly. I am aware that logic is, at the very least in this universe, self-deterministic.
 
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pjnlsn

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And now you're no longer paying attention to what I'm saying. I specifically said that I believe God is bound by logic. Specifically and repeatedly. I am aware that logic is, at the very least in this universe, self-deterministic.

Yes, but even if there was another universe where they speak English and they have something they call logic, if it wasn't self-deterministic, it wouldn't be logic, it would just be another random thing with a similar name, and so irrelevant. I mean, you said that bit about another universe as though it meant something now.

And I meant that it's likely you associate the god that could be with the god you believe is closely in your mind, and treat them similarly.
 
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pjnlsn

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argh! This is the point: God could create a rock so big that He couldn't lift it, but then He would cease to be all-powerful, hence THE LAW prevents Him from doing it.

If you have a problem with that, take it up with the Law, not with God!

I suggest exploring a similar question, which is designed to expose the fact that the very premise of a contradiction is an anathema to God:

Can God create a contradiction?

The answer is "no". Even mentioning contradiction in the same sentence as God is against the Law, and therefore sin. It's invalid before you even start. Of course you are tempted to mention contradiction in connection with God, but that is not because God is weak or some such thing, it is because you are a sinner.

These are heavy words for someone who has no faith, but it is the truth. The sophistry of contradictions is not of God. God cannot create without the Law since what God creates must be for all time and the only way God can create for all time is if the Law sustains what God creates for all time. Hence there is nothing God creates that is apart from the Law, hence IF THE LAW DOES NOT ALLOW GOD to create CONTRADICTION God cannot do it. THAT IS the Law.

Firstly, it's suggestive of inconsistencies to speak of directly creating a contradiction. What would be an object but which is described by a statement which has an internal contradiction is not an object to be created.

And again perhaps we should not speak of the entity which might be described in part by the concept definitively or personally, as though it must exist and we have had a personal interaction with it, even as there's no reason for it to exist.

And then there's that the phrasing, specifically of referring to everything as 'the Law' is a phrasing less designed to convey information and more to create some emotional impact in the reader, or to suggest one in the writer. And then of course, there's the use of the phrase 'the Law' to refer not only to a description of a possible entity, perhaps without the contradiction, but also of a command that people never talk about it. But as below, that you'd prefer it to be that way is irrelevant.

Furthermore, while you, as you have apparently thoroughly personified the possible entity, may very much not like anyone to point it out: There is still a contradiction between omnipotence and to be able to create anything, or an internal one in the concept of omnipotence.

That you really don't like this to be pointed out, because it might be construed as a 'weakness' is irrelevant. That it might've been anathema to the entity in some way is also irrelevant. That it is not 'of God' is also irrelevant is still present.

This is not to say that there is not a similar concept, of a god, which does not contain the contradiction, and indeed, I have already stated it.

But similarly to before, while the concept of omnipotence has this internal contradiction, an imagined entity which is not all-powerful but rather most powerful, or which is merely defined as having various abstract and ephemeral abilities, doesn't involve this particular contradiction.

I would say the above is a better way to describe it, for it's more clear (far, far more clear), and the one who wrote it doesn't do so in concert with various unjustified and mostly irrelevant things. Or in concert with saying that the topic should never be considered.
 
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brightlights

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The above supports that there is a contradiction in the idea of omnipotence, rather than dissipating it, if such was your intent. You can say that God can 'break' the laws of logic, but this doesn't mean that the contradiction isn't present either. And obviously that it makes no sense to you doesn't mean that the contradiction isn't present.
I've tried to make sense of this a few times but I don't understand what you're saying. Could you rephrase?
 
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brightlights

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An infinite is something that is without bounds/limits, if something that have bound/limit than it's not infinite, an infinite not having bounds/limits does not mean that it's not infinite.

The question is whether or not logical limits are limits. Something logically impossible like a square circle cannot exist by definition. It's just two words put together. It doesn't mean anything.
 
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