stamenflicker
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- Apr 8, 2004
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So explain in your own terms, and try to do it in as few words as possible, please.
Sorry... it is not possible for both things to occur. Is that more helpful?
Stamen
So explain in your own terms, and try to do it in as few words as possible, please.
You say that "permanence is not intrinsically impossible". But on the other hand you say something unbreakable is intrinsically impossible if there is an omnipotent God. So some object could be permanent but breakable? But if something was unbreakable wouldn't it also be permanent? You appear to be flip-flopping on this issue. Are you saying that permanence is not intrinsically impossible, but would be intrinsically impossible with an omnipotent God?
Your whole argument is closer to South Park than Wittgenstein.
You must admit that it is very sloppy to say something is intrinsically impossible if it is in fact possible. Would Heidegger do that? Would Wittgenstein?
My original position was put on page 1 and I have seen nothing that would make me want to modify it. You are saying Robin's sentence must be false because stamenflicker can make up a totally separate sentence and if stamenflickers sentence does not make sense then Robin's cannot either.
"All-lying person can never tell the truth".
They would all be rolling in their graves to hear their names co-opted to such a lame argument as you are making.
So I am asking you again 'Can God prevent an object from being broken, say for the period of 1 hour?'
Ossai, the statement above is true because the statement X can do anything except what X can't do is necessarily true for all X. That is a banal tautology that has nothing to do with the limits of omnipotence. It would still be true regardless of how omnipotence, or indeed, powers less than omnipotence, were defined. You seem to have obsessively latched on to the fact that the statement is coincidentally true of omnipotent beings and erroneously concluded that the tautology arises from how omnipotence is traditionally defined. This is just not the case.Ossai said:ceo_esq
Which means an omnipotent being can do everything except what an omnipotent being can’t do.
What do you mean by human logic? Logic is logic in every possible universe, whether such universe contains human beings, omnipotent beings, both, or neither.Ossai said:Because your omnipotent being is still limited by human logic.
A few observations here. First, who says the omnipotent being did that? We're not talking about the God of the New Testament. We're talking about the "God" of philosophy of religion, which is ordinarily merely a shorthand term for a hypothesized bundle of a few basic attributes (such as omnipotence). We are looking for basic theoretical contradictions here, not scrutinizing the religious narratives of Christianity specifically.Ossai said:It’s intrinsically impossible for a person to come back to life after being dead for a day and a half, and yet the omnipotent being (or some part of) supposedly did that.
She scored the highest recorded score ever on tests that measure a person's ability to make sense out of chaos and to see patterns. Her abilities to understand and to think logically were also strong. She had a perfect score on an adult-level test that measured spatial abilities. One test required that she use a set of colored sticks to recreate a complicated structure from memory. She was not only able to build the structure perfectly, she built it with sticks of the exact same color as the first structure! Despite all this, Genie remained unable to master the basics of language.
How so?Well fine. Let them. They remain undefeated and the game remains unwinnable.
So God says "This will never be broken" and then they go on for eternity, God trying to see if he can break it. God remains omnipotent and the kingdom remains unbreakable. That logic breaks down instantly.
What you are saying is that the moment god declares B, god becomes non-omnipotent because cannot then declare not B.
However, I still don't think that the borders of human language restrict the idea of omnipotence, indeed for you to think that would be very anthropocentric.
Now I see the source of your confusion. Where exactly did I say that omnipotence in relation to permanence is not possible? I said that there was no reliable definition of omnipotence.stamenflicker said:Omnipotence in relation to permenance is a semantic mysnomer, and either a) not possible (your position) or b) not knowable (my position).
A lie doesn't "range over" the truth? Are you serious? A lie necessarily ranges over the truth. To "range over" something does not imply a contradiction or mutual exclusion as you seem to think, it merely refers to the set that a function lands in. A lie will necessarily land in the set of truth values (ie true/false).stamenflicker said:"All-lying person can never tell the truth".
Sigh. Neither of these limits "range over themselves."
Now I see the source of your confusion. Where exactly did I say that omnipotence in relation to permanence is not possible? I said that there was no reliable definition of omnipotence.
is that ungrammatical, intrinsically impossible or absurd?
I said that there was no reliable definition of omnipotence.
A lie will necessarily land in the set of truth values
In any case what you actually said was that "All Can [VERBS] a Cannot" is necessarily silly. I demonstrated that it was not.
Fascinating! Earlier you were claiming that the rules of semantics were as consistent and precise as the rules of mathematics but everytime I ask you a question you say "unknowable due to the restrictions of language".stamenflicker said:Robin: So I am asking you again 'Can God prevent an object from being broken, say for the period of 1 hour?'
Stamenflicker: And I am saying that your question is grammatically incorrect because the answer to the question is unknowable. Since the two limits overlap, either they are the same object, non-existant, two seperate but illogical objects, or (my position) unknowable due to the restrictions of language.
'false' is a truth value. The set of truth values is {true,false}. A function that ranges over the set of truth values is called a boolean function. A lie necessarily lands in the set of truth values. So the statement "never tell the truth" clearly refers to all of {true,false} and an all-lying function will land on this set. Also an all-liar will need the whole set because otherwise how will he consistently lie if he does not know what the truth is?stamenflicker said:I lie, by definition lands outside a set of truth values, that is why we determine it to be false.
I have consistently said that there is no unambiguous definition for omnipotence so clearly I am unable to say whether or not omnipotence is possible.It is quite possible I have misunderstood you. I assumed you were saying omnipotence was not possible because it should be able to say, "This will never be broken."
Are you then saying that omnipotence is possible?
Tut tut again. You are saying that "not truth" is an equivalent term to "lying" Again, are you serious? I suppose you will tell me that Heidegger, Russell and the lot would say the same thing? Have you heard of a little thing called fiction which is neither truth nor lies? Don't substitute terms unless you are absolutely sure they are equivalent.stamenflicker said:All lying / person / can never tell / the truth
All not truth / person / can never tell / the truth
By suggesting that we might not be using the same standard, I think I was referring to a different standard for intrinsic impossibilities. I then tried to point out that the notion create an immovable rock can - arguably, anyway - be shown to contain within itself a contradiction without needing to refer to possible externalities such as the existence or non-existence of an omnipotent being. Pushing in a given direction, which you've argued should be an impossibility under certain circumstances (if it involves O1 opposing O2), does not seem to be intrinsically impossible insofar as it is not impossible by the same standard that creating an unliftable rock is. I'm not sure I've clearly explained myself here. Do you catch my drift, though?Robin said:Show me where I use any line of argumentation that is unique to multiple omnipotences. I have tried to use traditional theology.
Hmm. Do you mean to suggest that an evil omnipotent being and a good omnipotent being will always behave indistinguishably? Or that it is futile to speak of the moral alignment of an omnipotent being in any event? That's a new one to me.Robin said:But there is no special pleading here, conventional theology says that an omnipotent being cannot do the wrong thing. ...
[snip...]
That an omnipotent being is rational is axiomatic. That a rational being must act rationally is tautological.
I don't think this is true of intrinsic impossibilities. A married bachelor is a priori impossible (i.e. impossible independent of whether or not marriage exists, or bachelors exist).Robin said:An omnipotent being is incapable of sinning or making a mistake - but this intrinsic impossibility does not exist unless omnipotence exists.
This is another reason why I suspect that the opposition of O1 and O2 is not an intrinsic impossibility - because it bears upon actions that can be theoretically conceived (like wanting to move the rock ten feet to the left, although your omnipotent twin wants to move it ten feet to the right).Robin said:But as you said yourself, intrinsic impossibility is a null set.
Good point, although it seems to me that theological discussions of the Trinity have been largely preoccupied with showing that the doctrine did not imply the existence of three omnipotent gods. Partly, I should think, out of a desire to avoid running afoul of the general recognition of the logical absurdity of multiple omnipotentates.Robin said:I would be interested too, but I am not aware of it - the closest is the Christian doctrine of the Trinity one God three Persons.
You have said that an omnipotent being is a possibility
'false' is a truth value. The set of truth values is {true,false}. A function that ranges over the set of truth values is called a boolean function. A lie necessarily lands in the set of truth values. So the statement "never tell the truth" clearly refers to all of {true,false} and an all-lying function will land on this set. Also an all-liar will need the whole set because otherwise how will he consistently lie if he does not know what the truth is?
you said semantics were as consistent and precise as the rules of mathematics
You are saying that "not truth" is an equivalent term to "lying"
Same thing - a base requirement for omnipotence is surely existence.stamenflicker said:Robin: You have said that an omnipotent being is a possibility
stamenflicker : Actually I said omnipotence is a possibility.
So what else is new?As for the rest of your post I didn't read it.
I would remind you that I am the topic starter. However I addressed your points in details and you have accused me of not wanting to argue language with you, so quit finding excuses to avoid answering.Re-state your thoughts by using the argument at hand please.
Certainly, here is the first:Robin: you said semantics were as consistent and precise as the rules of mathematics
stamenflicker: Hmmm? I missed the post where I said that. Maybe I had too much Amber-boch that night. Can you find where I've said that and save me the trouble?
"same method applied to infinity", which as I have already pointed out is rigorous and consistent, and here again:quote:
Robin: But we can deal with infinity mathematically because we have a method (the mathematical field of limits) of doing so rigorously and consistently. If you know of some similar method of resolving the ambiguities posed by intrinsic impossibility please share.
stamenflicker: Intrinsic impossiblity is the result of semantics, pure and simple. It is the same method applied to infinity, only because the problem is language it can't look exactly the same nor can it be repeatable.
"...the same is true in language" - but I differentiated maths and semantics by the properties of rigor and consistency. Do you now accept that semantics is not rigorous and consistent and that your original comparison of theological intrinsic impossibility to infinity was therefore inappropriate?Robin: Again maths harnesses the intrinsic impossibility in a rigorous and consistent manner - the method of proof by contradiction.
stamenflicker: And the same is true in language, you just don't accept the language rules nor the matter of proven contradiction.
No, I used lying and truth as a mutual exclusion - which they are (at least in common usage). By substituting "not truth" for "lying" you have implied that they are complementary terms, which they are not.Robin: You are saying that "not truth" is an equivalent term to "lying"
stamenflicker: In your sentence it is exactly the same. Lying is defined as "not telling the truth." Unless you want to redefine lying as "telling fiction." But you just said that a fiction is neither truth nor lie, which we agree.
No, because by saying an X "is a" Y you are saying they are equivalent. By substituting terms you are saying they are equivalent. But "lie" and "not truth" are not equivalent. If you can't see that we will go nowhere.A lie is a "not truth." If we cannot agree on that we will go no where.
That is the second time you have confused a mutual exclusion with complementary terms. Both times you have not even acknowledged your error. Lies and truth are mutually exclusive (in common usage) but are not complementary. If you want to substitute "not Y" for X then X and Y must be complementary and not just a mutex.Just because a lie is "not truth" does not mean that mean that all "not truth" are lies.
My logic stands.
But I think both standards are inherent in the Thomist definition of omnipotence quoted in my OP.Originally posted by ceo_esq
By suggesting that we might not be using the same standard, I think I was referring to a different standard for intrinsic impossibilities.
Most people argue that the intrinsic impossibility of the unliftable or unmoveable rock occurs with respect to omnipotence. I do not see why moveability, liftability or breakability form the definition of a rock or any other object independent of any externalities. Surely the very idea of moving or lifting an object implies some externality.I then tried to point out that the notion create an immovable rock can - arguably, anyway - be shown to contain within itself a contradiction without needing to refer to possible externalities such as the existence or non-existence of an omnipotent being. Pushing in a given direction, which you've argued should be an impossibility under certain circumstances (if it involves O1 opposing O2), does not seem to be intrinsically impossible insofar as it is not impossible by the same standard that creating an unliftable rock is. I'm not sure I've clearly explained myself here. Do you catch my drift, though?
Certainly neither of my main arguments in this thread would hold up under an evil or indifferent God, I concede that. O1 and O2 have to be both benevolent. Unbreakable objects can only be shown to exist under a Thomist definition of omnipotence.Hmm. Do you mean to suggest that an evil omnipotent being and a good omnipotent being will always behave indistinguishably? Or that it is futile to speak of the moral alignment of an omnipotent being in any event? That's a new one to me.
This is a good point, although I am sure that traditional theism argues that everything a benevolent God does has a purpose. And if there were two morally or rationally neutral (or equivalent) courses of action what would one omnipotent, benevolent being do? There is no rational method of deciding, so one perfectly rational being (incapable of doing anything that is not rational) would be deadlocked just as much as two would. He can't throw a dice since he already knows what will come up.For that matter, can't two different choices be equally rational? What about choices that appear morally or rationally neutral? Can't O1 prefer to paint the living room blue and O2 prefer to paint it red?
As I said earlier the "intrinsic impossibility" of God sinning comes from the Thomist definition, so you would have to take that up with St Tom.I don't think this is true of intrinsic impossibilities. A married bachelor is a priori impossible (i.e. impossible independent of whether or not marriage exists, or bachelors exist).
You have introduced two concepts in this quote: 1. the intrinsically impossible thing, 2. the action that cannot be done due to the intrinsic impossibility. A square circle may not really be a thing but it is possible to conceive some being continuously attempting to create it and failing. So "try to create a square circle" is not an intrinsic impossibility, it is just that succeeding in the task is. We assume that a rational being will not attempt to do that which can not be done.This is another reason why I suspect that the opposition of O1 and O2 is not an intrinsic impossibility - because it bears upon actions that can be theoretically conceived (like wanting to move the rock ten feet to the left, although your omnipotent twin wants to move it ten feet to the right).
Square circles, to use an example, are not really things. They're not even ideas, properly speaking. A set "containing" them is null because there aren't any contents to describe. Don't you see, or even sense intuitively, that this is qualitatively different than actions which are allegedly "impossible" merely because it would mean disagreeing with another omnipotent being?