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FutileRhetoric
Guest
I've read Bible front to back after reading How to Read the Bible For All Its' Worth, Muhammed, A Prophet For Our Time, and summary's of God in the Koran, but I don't know that I know anything about God. Tell me if you agree, I think there is rational conclusion we can make about God. God defined as a omnipotent entity that is 'out there,' the only meaniingful definition of God, imo.
1) God, defined as omnipotent, includes the qualities of omniscience, all-loving, etc. Because omnipotence requires God to be all powerful, God is also not all powerful at the same time.So, a logical response to the Burrito argument (Could God microwave a burrito so hot he himself can't eat it?) is both yes and no because God is a logical paradox. God is simultaneously both bound and unbound and the question is meaningless, right?
My questions are:
If humans cannot know God intellectually, then any attempt to do so is futile, right? The alternative, religious or spiritual experience, is equally as futile because humans lack the espistemology of knowing about the supernatural?
And if this is all true, it begs me to ask what the point of engaging in any theological debate is for atheists if they are science based and know God cannot be known by humans right now. What is the point of seeking that which cannot be known intellectally or spiritually?
1) God, defined as omnipotent, includes the qualities of omniscience, all-loving, etc. Because omnipotence requires God to be all powerful, God is also not all powerful at the same time.So, a logical response to the Burrito argument (Could God microwave a burrito so hot he himself can't eat it?) is both yes and no because God is a logical paradox. God is simultaneously both bound and unbound and the question is meaningless, right?
My questions are:
If humans cannot know God intellectually, then any attempt to do so is futile, right? The alternative, religious or spiritual experience, is equally as futile because humans lack the espistemology of knowing about the supernatural?
And if this is all true, it begs me to ask what the point of engaging in any theological debate is for atheists if they are science based and know God cannot be known by humans right now. What is the point of seeking that which cannot be known intellectally or spiritually?