elopez
Well-Known Member
All the definition implies is that timeless entails changeless. You're adding to it and saying changeless also implies cannot change, which is unwarranted to the definition.It follows from the definition of it.
Right but I never stated everything must remian static. Indeed I stated the opposite.You appeared to agree earlier: "If time does not exist, everything is static. There must be time for there to be movement. There must be time for change to occur."
Again, all timelessness entails is changelessness. What that further entails is still in question and up for debate.To ask that question is to betray a lack of understanding about what timelessness entails.
And I don't think you understand how that may not be the case. At least you have not presented a good case for it.I don't think you understand how immobilising timelessness is.
Omnipotence is to do the logically possible. My case is that it is logically possible for a timeless being to change and thus not be timeless.What good is omnipotence if one cannot use it? In what sense can one be said to "move" if there are no spatial dimensions to move through? Just what is being "moved" anyway?
Well you're think of moving in spatial terms. God does not have a body. God Himself moves. Omnipresence has not been explored much theologically. I am not sure exactly what moves being God is not composed of flesh or bone or any other materials.
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