I'm just not sure which characteristics of God you believe the Problem of Evil has disproved. It hasn't disproved any of those you've previously defined. We've already discussed that logical proofs cannot be used to disprove a definition of omnipotence that requires God to be able to do the logically impossible. I've also addressed the other definitions you've given, showing that they can fit quite nicely within logic despite the Problem of Evil.
You simply changed the concept of God, the meaning of good, evil, and omnipotence from my statement. You've stated that good and evil are determined by what we feel in our hearts. No, I'm sorry Bri. I don't think you've done what you think.
I don't believe so. Nomological possibility only applies to the natural, not the supernatural (which is, by definition, beyond nature). If God created nature, there is no reason to believe that he would be limited by it.
LOL. But you see, that gives us no information whatsoever. If God makes the rules, but we don't know the mind of God, then that means we no nothing of the rules. There might as well be no rules. Sure, anything is possible when there are no rules that govern the premises.
So if one believes that God is not limited by the rules of nature, it would be hypocritical to claim that He must be limited by the rules of logic. Why couldn't He make a square circle. After all, he's making the rules, right?
I don't believe you've shown at all that such a God is not good, not to mention other notions of God that might fit the properties you described. At most, you've shown that what is "good" for God might be different than what is "good" for humans (hardly surprising considering our limitations that don't apply to God). Let's assume for a moment that morals (at least human morals) don't apply to God. So what? How exactly does that disprove that God is good? Apples are good, but morals don't apply to apples.
Then it simply means that it makes no sense to call God "good" because you cannot tell me what "good" means when applied to God. You can tell me what "good" means as applied to an apple. You can tell me what it means as applied to a human. But what is "good" to God? All you are saying is, "God is good, whatever that means."
The ones I've heard are omnipotence, omniscience, and benevolence. The Problem of Evil doesn't disprove such a God, even by your own definitions (much less other definitions posted).
It doesn't disprove it. It just shows it to be logically self-contradictory.
Since that was exactly my point, it sounds as though we're in agreement! End of discussion! (?)
But you can show
certain concepts of God to be self contradictory. No, not yours. The one I described. I couldn't begin to describe your concept of God because there are apparently no rules or limitations whatsoever.
I'm glad you qualified that, because of course there is evidence of God, just nothing definitive. There is also very little compelling evidence that intelligent extra-terrestrials exist, yet many people believe they exist.
Extraterrestrials actually have the edge on God, as far as existence goes, because we do have at least one well-documented instance of intelligent life on a planet, and we know that there are many other planets. But I'm unfamiliar with any valid evidence for any gods. Do you have some?
It would make sense that God would not only be able to intercede on earth without leaving evidence, but that he would have reason to do so. If we knew for certain that God exists, it would certainly affect our freedom to choose between right and wrong.
Actually, that makes little sense either, at least for God as He is described in the Bible. From what I gather, that concept of God wants us to worship Him. Wouldn't it make it much more likely that He would get what He wants if He made Himself a little more obvious? In fact, for any concept of God, the obvious conclusion you would draw if you saw the dearth of evidence would be that if God existed, He doesn't want us to find out about Him.
Sounds like a loaded question to me! Actually, both a belief in God (or extra-terrestrials) and a belief that there is no God (or no extra-terrestrials) are uninformed opinions since there is little to no evidence to support them.
Like I say. More for extraterrestrials. Still not much.
But at least we've established that theists and UFO believers have much in common.