Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
It is not really a well defined set is it? How do you define an "all powerful activity"? What do you exactly mean by "an omnipotent value". What is your definition of omnipotence? Do you accept the Thomist definition linked in the OP? Or do you have another definition? The most popular definition does not refer to "all powers" but "all intrinsically possible powers". The question about the unbreakable object was to determine if there was a disambiguation for "intrinsically possible", now you are referring back to omnipotence as though it had already been defined. You really can't see the circularity here?stamenflicker said:That's fine. The set of omnipotent values is then {all powerful activities, not all powerful activities.}
Again "That which resists all intrinsically possible powers...". The question being begged is whether the ability to break any object is an intrinsically possible power.That which resists all power necessarily lies in the set of all power values.
Could an omnipotent entity break itself? Either the answer is no or the question is nonsensical in which case the power to break any object is an impossibility or a nonsense.
Can an omnipotent entity (using the Thomist definition) break a promise? No, in fact all this means is that an omnipotent entity has the ability to make a promise. Can an omnipotent entity promise that some object will never be broken? Either the answer is yes or the question is nonsensical, if nonsensical then the Thomist definition is nonsensical so you need to provide another.
If the answer is yes (since an all-powerful being has the power to keep the promise) then there are no circumstances whatever under which the object can be broken, The ominpotent entity could not do so even if it wanted to because to do so would mean the omnipotent being was wrong. It would be illogical to term an object that cannot be broken under any circumstances as "breakable". So it is unbreakable.
So either there can be an unbreakable object or the Thomist definition of omnipotence is nonsensical.