LeafByNiggle
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- Jul 20, 2021
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What we think of as "reality" in gravity is only our perception of reality, which could very well be deficient. So it is not logical to go from "God is constrained by reality" to "God is constrained by our understanding of the what we call the laws of nature.But is God truly above those laws? Or is He too constrained by them?
What I mean by this isn't that God is subject to the law of gravity for example, but rather that as the Creator of reality He's constrained to the laws that underpin reality.
That argument is made by those with a vested interest in this particular reality. I am reminded of an episode of the Simpsons where an imminent catastrophe prompts discussion of who should be given priority in the shelters. Krusty the Clown says "Civilization is going to need laughter, so I'm in."One of the arguments for God comes from idea of fine-tuning, that if the fundamental laws of nature were even slightly different then we wouldn't exist.
Those who make that argument have a limited imagination.So God had no choice about how to create reality, only about if to create reality.
The question does not make sense. It asks if A is because of B or is B because of A. We must admit the possibility of a third option: "It is unknowable in principle."I recognize that this is in essence Euthypro's dilemma. But how is it incorrect?
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