A Small Question About God
#1
Posted 10 June 2010 - 04:41
Omnipotence, is what i am getting at here.
#2
Posted 10 June 2010 - 06:23
And the occasional "can god make a brick so heavy even he can't lift it", yeah.
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#4
Posted 10 June 2010 - 11:52
#5
Posted 10 June 2010 - 14:54
AJ is responsible for this signature masterpiece... if you see him, tell him I say thanks.
#6
Posted 10 June 2010 - 14:59
Cue deism.
#7
#8
Posted 10 June 2010 - 15:09
Take a cooked steak for example. You may assume that it is hot, as it has recently been cooked, but heat is not a prerequisite of a steak. It is possible to have a steak that is both cooked and cold. The fact that the steak is cold does not disprove the fact it is cooked, so to say.
What I'm getting at here is you cannot disprove something just by disproving assumptions related to it.
#9
Posted 10 June 2010 - 15:32
#10
Posted 10 June 2010 - 15:34
#11
Posted 10 June 2010 - 15:51
#12
Posted 10 June 2010 - 17:23
Well yeah thats nice and all but why would you interprete omnipotence as breaking through Gods own limitations. If he really is omnipotent he has no limitations, and the simple answer would be the burrito would get infinitely hot and God could still infinitely eat it. The ''so hot that even he can't eat it'' is a limitation set by your mind. However the limit would actually lie in physics, the threshold at which the burrito Xplodes with the sp33d of light or something.
Edited by Trivmvirate, 10 June 2010 - 17:24.
#13
Posted 10 June 2010 - 17:35
Alias, on 10 Jun 2010, 16:59, said:
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#14
Posted 10 June 2010 - 17:39
A trained theologist would easily dismiss any argument so far used in this topic.
#15
Posted 10 June 2010 - 17:46
ThatDR, on 10 Jun 2010, 16:32, said:
No. Why? Because your definition of "religion" is wrong. There is no word of the God. Period. And this is coming from a religious person.
Holy books were never written by God nor were the words in them spoken by God. Human made metaphores ARE NOT literal commands of God. The only text I can think of that "might" have been the literal words of God would be the 10 Commandments. That being said God may be omnipotent but isnt required to be.
And now let me counter the "Uber" question: "Why would God create something like that in the first place?"
#16
Posted 10 June 2010 - 18:05
TehDR, on 10 Jun 2010, 18:46, said:
ThatDR, on 10 Jun 2010, 16:32, said:
No. Why? Because your definition of "religion" is wrong. There is no word of the God. Period. And this is coming from a religious person.
Holy books were never written by God nor were the words in them spoken by God. Human made metaphores ARE NOT literal commands of God. The only text I can think of that "might" have been the literal words of God would be the 10 Commandments. That being said God may be omnipotent but isnt required to be.
And now let me counter the "Uber" question: "Why would God create something like that in the first place?"
I have a little question : Did you ever read the Koran? Did you even hear about it? I took the islam as an example because it's clearly stated in the first soura (verse) of it that the words are actually from God himself, brought by the Archangel Gabriel. And all the Koran IS (supposedly, since I don't believe in it) the literal words of God.
I'm sure you'd get a confirmation of that if you ask any Imam who knows how his job...
#17
Posted 10 June 2010 - 19:32
#18
Posted 10 June 2010 - 19:43
#20
Posted 10 June 2010 - 23:04
Edited by AJ, 10 June 2010 - 23:07.
#21
Posted 10 June 2010 - 23:07
Ill make it my own make-believe god. Who IS omnipotent.
Would the question still be possible?
#22
Posted 11 June 2010 - 10:21
Dr. Genrail, on 11 Jun 2010, 9:07, said:
Ill make it my own make-believe god. Who IS omnipotent.
Would the question still be possible?
To answer the question, yes, God can make an infinitely hot burrito. That does not mean it is impossible for God to eat it.
This all leans on the fact that an omnipotent God needs food in the first place, which by the definition would not.
#23
Posted 28 July 2010 - 08:36
Has there been any instance in any religious scripture that involved time manipulation? Because that's a very recent concept and was probably beyond the imagination of the people from way back when. If God can't manipulate the arrow of time, than God isn't omnipotent.
#24
Posted 28 July 2010 - 10:28
Also, your concept of time is flawed. With an extremely high probability, there is no such thing as an "arrow of time". At least not a single, straight, non-11-dimensional one.
Edited by Golan, 28 July 2010 - 10:29.
#25
Posted 28 July 2010 - 13:06
I'm using the term 'arrow of time' in a non-scientific sense meaning the direction of time.
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