Oncedeceived
Senior Veteran
You are making some assumptions are you not? Are you not implying that God's mind is like a Turing Machine?Until you address the argument, I have.
You made the comment that the same power that created the universe would be the same power that was responsible for God's inability to violate logic correct?Then why were you just now confused and asking if I believe the universe being caused necessarily entails a contradiction? You asked this:
Ok, so why did you say what power was used to create the universe when we were speaking of contradictions?
and when I "spelled it back to you" you didn't make any reference to it being incorrect.
Could you explain this because I am not following this point.In your defense there's a technicality working on your side. God indeed could've created the universe. But I have explained with absolute certainty that the mechanism by which he did so necessarily was either acausal (not involving causality) or else he invoked causality at the expense of violating logic.
Again, break this down for me. Why does God not violating logic have to do with the creation of the universe.But I do believe that you mean for "create" and "cause" to be the same thing (at least in this context), and I believe your position is that God cannot violate logic, so your argument that God created the universe is 100% falsified given the assumptions you cling to. In fact, your argument is not only false, it's incoherent.
Is not your basic position that if God can not violate logic HE is not omniscient?Regardless, though, you're not only failing to follow the logic I'm using but you're not even able to remember my basic position, as shown by the fact that you ask for clarification on something that was spelled out explicitly in bold letters a hundred posts ago. Even the proof was given in colored font, so I don't know how you missed it.
From post #202: If God is unable to violate logic then he is not omniscient.By the way, with regard to this part:
and when I "spelled it back to you" you didn't make any reference to it being incorrect.
Again you're wrong. You attempted to summarize my argument in post #200, and I certainly made a reference to it being incorrect in post #202.
Now to make this statement you are assuming that God's mind behaves a certain way. You are making the claim that there exists a way for God's mind to allow for a self-contradicting state of affairs, what are you basing that assumption on?
I understand your confusion, but I presented it as a way to show that God is a necessary Being and that He necessarily exists. If God's exists and His logic has provided the universe, laws thereof and logic itself, it is not a stretch to claim that God's mind behaves in an ordered logic reasoned way that works outside of the system He created. Not only outside but that His mind does not behave like a Turning Machine which is what I believe you are trying to imply.I'm going to stop you right here because you're embarrassing yourself. You looked up Gödel's Ontological Argument. I'm referring to his Incompleteness Theorem. They're as related as Pascal's Wager and Pascal's Triangle.
I am paying attention and trying to discuss this but you seem to expect someone to just accept your position without question. Now your premises of the theory is correct but I think your assumptions in regard to it are flawed and I am trying to find out where that is stemming from.If you really did mean to drive us off topic by throwing an unrelated "proof" at me and this "proof" just so happened to be authored by the obscure person I was referencing, then fine, I'll refute that terrible "proof." Otherwise I'm chalking this up to being another case of you not paying attention.
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