RE: What created God?
June 28, 2010 at 9:58 am
(This post was last modified: June 28, 2010 at 10:02 am by tavarish.)
(June 26, 2010 at 4:26 am)tackattack Wrote:
1. So you just demonstrated that God isn't omnipotent, since he can't change the parameters of his existence, and assert that his power is necessarily confined to our universe (whatever that means).
By the way, immutability is quite common on Christian doctrine:
http://bible.org/seriespage/immutability-god
http://www.pbministries.org/books/pink/A...rib_07.htm
http://www.givingananswer.org/articles/i...ility.html
http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1009.htm
http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/Believer%...utable.htm
1b. Because omniscience isn't simply seeing the possibilities of what can occur, it's knowing with absolute certainty what WILL occur at any point. With that, God cannot stray from his own path without compromising his omnipotence.
I'll follow your lake analogy:
God knows that he will be surveying a lake and tasering a shark to save a fish. Now God KNOWS this ahead of time, and therefore has no way of making a choice NOT to do it, otherwise he would not know what he was going to do with absolute certainty. If he could change his actions, that would necessarily mean he was mistaken in his knowledge, and if he couldn't change his actions, that necessarily means he is not only not omnipotent, but impotent.
Do you understand now?
2. Please be more specific.
3. Boils down to two axioms - primacy of existence and primacy of consciousness. I outlined them for you in the previous post. If you support the primacy of consciousness (that existence is dependent on a mind), how do you distinguish the real from unreal, and how can you be certain that mind is necessarily God with the attributes that you list?
4. I'll ask them to chime in.
Any theists want to revise tackattack's attributes of God?
I should probably make another thread for that.
My blog: The Usual Rhetoric