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It's not avoiding the question, because it's an inherently meaningless question.
I would say rather: Since even if a god could perform logically impossible acts we could not tell (how would we know that such a god actually succeeded in making a square circle), such propositions are useless.Thus, God can't perform acts that are logically impossible, because they inherently make no sense.
[More on a sidenote:Funnily enough, Biblegod is claimed to be able to do the logically impossible, e.g. being his own son.]Well, since it's not a "yes," I'll take it as a no. God can't do it because the concept is meaningless.
Even as a non-believer I wouldn´t concede that. The way we construct our language and other formal systems (and what´s possible or impossible/permitted or not permitted/meaningful or not meaningful to say in them) aren´t rules that God (or reality) is dependent on.When I was a Christian, I would have simply said that "No, God can't do the logically impossible." And, that omnipotence doesn't entail doing the logically impossible. Near the end of my tenure as a Christian I would have conceded that this means that in some sense God is dependent/obedient to rules outside itself.
I would agree.Even as a non-believer I wouldn´t concede that. The way we construct our language and other formal systems (and what´s possible or impossible/permitted or not permitted/meaningful or not meaningful to say in them) aren´t rules that God (or reality) is dependent on.
That was my very point.I would agree.
But that would mean that such arguments - on both sides - are fundamentally invalid. Right?
CorrectSo then God is limited by what logic allows? In other words, God can't do things that are logically impossible?
I think it´s stupid to expect God or whatever to be able to perform acts that are meaningless due to the definitions of human language.
I'm an atheist, and I don't understand how a believer can submit/admit to something like the above.I am a firm believer in God and believe that morality is certainly derived from Him and Him alone...
It depends what you are trying to debate.that being said, however, I'm wondering how a person would debate this with someone like an Atheist?
If both truth and morality are objective then they can't come from god.since the truth is objective and not just some kind of malleable or subjective reality.
Clearly define what you are debating, be respectful, listen and ask for clarification rather than assume the other person is wrong.how would someone discuss this point with an Atheist who clearly does not believe in God and seems highly unlikely to cave in to the idea?
Correct
Laws of logic apply to everybody. Creating laws does not give anybody the authority nor ability to break them; if it did they wouldn't be laws of logic.I would have to disagree. Given that God is supposed to have created the laws of this universe upon which we base our logic we have no idea what God would or would not be capable of. We have no idea of the rules that would limit such a being.
Laws of logic apply to everybody. Creating laws does not give anybody the authority nor ability to break them; if it did they wouldn't be laws of logic.
I don´t think you can conflate the laws of the universe and the laws of a human formal system which basically just regulate the semantics of said system. They are completely different things, in my understanding.I would have to disagree. Given that God is supposed to have created the laws of this universe upon which we base our logic we have no idea what God would or would not be capable of. We have no idea of the rules that would limit such a being.
I don´t think you can conflate the laws of the universe and the laws of a human formal system which basically just regulate the semantics of said system. They are completely different things, in my understanding.
I´ll try. Logic, in my understanding is a formal system (i.e. it determines what can be said meaningfully in the given system). A formal system doesn´t (necessarily) emulate reality.I don't think I am fully understanding your meaning. Can you paraphrase?
I´ll try. Logic, in my understanding is a formal system (i.e. it determines what can be said meaningfully in the given system). A formal system doesn´t (necessarily) emulate reality.
Take chess rules, for example. Do they emulate reality? Can anyone or God, for that matter, determine that the allowed moves are different than the ones the inventors of chess determined to be the rules?
Mathematics: Can someone (or God) simply exchange the meanings of 3 and 5 (that are humanly determined, and accepted by everyone who is willing to do mathematics according to these semantics)?
Can someone (or God) decide that the meanings of the words used in a nonsensical sentence can be changed so that the sentence is meaningful?
I´m not sure that this is what I meant to say. (I guess my point is more that logic determines what a a god (or anyone else) can be said (or not be said) to be able to do within the (assumed to be agreed upon) semantics of logic.I think I see what you are saying. It is possible to say things using logic that do not conform to reality and it is therefore not necessarily a good method for measuring what a god could do.
Is that correct?