yy2bggggs
Master Poster
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2007
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It's in the dictionary, by the way, so it's at least defined. I agree to some extent, but I frankly do not believe the term is well defined. However, I also do not believe there are only two possibilities--where a term must either be well defined, or we have no idea what we're talking about. In fact, I think we do have an idea what we're talking about, and all not being well defined does is make it harder to tread.I'm not so sure what you mean by separating the idea of "role" from definition. My point about definition is that if the word is not defined, it's pointless talking about it being rational to believe it exists. We have no idea what it is we're talking about.
With respect to the impersonal deist god you have a point. With respect to "some gods are appeased and feared but not actually worshipped", you're at the very least breaking from the set of definitions in Merriam-Webster (given MW online, definition 2 calls for gods "requiring worship"). Then again, I don't believe dictionaries were handed down by the gods either, but I think it at least warrants a bit more caution when you depart from them.So, if we use the characteristic of being worshipped (or worthy of being worshipped), the problem is that it would exclude the deist notion of an impersonal God (and a great many others--some Gods are appeased and feared but not actually worshipped--yet that is what those people mean when they use the term "god").
But all this does is move to an even more vague role.
Whoah... slow down a bit. RandFan didn't demonstrate that this definition includes too many. I think I covered this with my previous post.So rather than including too many (well it does that too, as Randfan pointed out), it excludes things that people would say should be in the class.
Actually, dog is a bad example. If you trace evolutionary lines, eventually you'll either get something quite arbitrary, or you're going to run into a fuzzy border. But those things that bark in my neighbor's yard? Definitely dogs.Now I don't mind excluding some people's notion of God, but it's obvious then that we're not dealing with a single class when we use the word "God" unlike, for example, the word "dog". We could list a series of characteristics that would form a class that could include everything we think is a dog and exclude everything that we think is not a dog.
In fact, I think most things you find are going to either be extremely arbitrary, or have fuzzy borders (and even the extremely arbitrary definitions often have fuzzy borders anyway). I don't think you'll have much luck finding things that are very well defined outside of mathematics and the like. All I can say is that I sincerely apologize on behalf of the universe for it not being easily pegged into Platonic ideals.
Not just then. They also back off when defining God for the purpose of arguments--for example, the Kalam cosmological argument. Furthermore, though they say omniscient, many place restrictions on what God knows in certain contexts (such as results of that free will thingy); though omnipotent, on what God can do (within the context of doctrines like atonement--namely, God can't forgive you unless something bleeds--it's a rule!); etc. I frankly think it's because they have no clue what they're talking about when they define it--not because they back off from the definition, but because the definition in itself is more a doctrine/dogma than an accurate description of what they mean.Again, I think this definition of God (the list of characteristics) should reflect the characteristics that most people attribute to God. People really profess to believe all that perfect, omniscient, omnipotent, etc. stuff until it comes time to discussing whether God is rationally possible.
But that's not an issue for me, if it is indeed what's going on.Then it becomes the very vague God retreating into the gaps.
Edit: I guess I must interject another point here. I find the problem with sticking to the omni definition a problem more for the opposition than the theist; the problem isn't really that theism is trying to move to dodge the bullet, the problem is more a desire to shoot only the easy to hit targets and claim victory. The evidence for this is the suggestion that we're supposed to ignore all of the targets that aren't hit, in addition to the fact that the targets not being hit are legitimate targets.
I'm not taking the theist side here--I don't care if all of the targets get hit, quite frankly. I'd just like to see you do the work.
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