mijopaalmc
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2007
- Messages
- 7,172
Forgive my ignorance, but what does zSB(3,3) mean?
Hey Piggy, good to see you!
Thanks. To paraphrase Justin Wilson, it's good for you to see me.![]()
Turns out, y'all are like heroin... I'd try to get away, but then I'd find myself in some familiar skeptical landscape, and I'd be jonesing for a JREF fix.
Y'all are my people -- even the ones I don't like... and if that's not family, then I don't know what is.
So I'm back. You're stuck with me.
Forgive my ignorance, but what does zSB(3,3) mean?
It looks impossible to prove or disprove God
If you demote the brain to just being some kind of radio then the only errors it can make are in transmitting and receiving. So if we start with a single soul controlling us an iron bar going through the brain and making us blind is understandable. An iron bar going through the brain and making us forget the last ten years of our life is not.No amount of tinkering with the brain can be definitive proof that the mind or soul are not received from some otherworldly realm. You may believe that there is no reason to suppose that it does, but that's a philosophical position and not proof.
Search for the thread "Proof of strong atheism". You'll get more than you care for.Piggy..other ways to debunk God please?![]()
Forgive my ignorance, but what does zSB(3,3) mean?
I've read through the thread and I have to say that I like your argument. I think that it is right. I don't normally disagree with piggy but here I will make an exception. Of course the problem we have is what does it mean to be perfect? It's an abstract concept with no real world embodiement. There is nothing to measure it against and it's not really something we can use as a standard to determine whether something is perfect because it's not really something we can define in any absolute way. Though to be certain there has been no lack of trying.
- God is perfect. (premise)
- God deliberately created the universe. (premise)
- Perfection entails the lack of needs or wants. (premise)
- Being perfect, God does not now nor ever has nor ever will have any needs or wants. (from 1, 3)
- Deliberate creation entails an effort to satisfy some need or want. zSB(3,3)Being a creator, God at one time had some need or want. (from 2, 5)
- It is impossible to have some need or want and also to never have any need or want.
- Conclusion: God, if it exists, is either not perfect or has not created anything. (from 4, 6)
Delta of the Metaphysics
1. which is complete — which contains all the requisite parts;
2. which is so good that nothing of the kind could be better;
3. which has attained its purpose.
--Aristotle
How about the Islamic God, Allah?So maybe refine the argument to apply only to the Judeo-Christian god?
I don't pick my nose unless I wanna boogie.all i can say is i dont pick my guitar unless i have an urge to create or perform
Can you walk me through how being perfect and having volition are mutually exclusive? There is no reason a perfect being would not have volition.Because God is Good, and Creation (see Genesis) is also "good." Because God is Good, he wants (hence, he has volition, even though he is perfect) to do as much that is good as possible. Hence creation.
Can you walk me through how being perfect and having volition are mutually exclusive?
What is the rationale for confining purpose to a single thing? That seems a baseless assumption.I think #3 best suits our purpose here. Did god have a purpose when he/she created humans? What was that purpose? If god had a purpose in creating humans then it had not attained its purpose prior.
The problem is that a believer can simply define purpose to exclude purpose. I don't think so but it's something that debating won't easily solve.
You also offer no reasons not to think they are true, which leaves you
no counter-argument.
For example, you cannot dismiss the concept of perfection being used without demonstrating that a different definition of perfection - and a valid one - is used in Christian theology.
I don't clain anysuch rationale.What is the rationale for confining purpose to a single thing? That seems a baseless assumption.
So long as there is no unfulflled purpose. Prior to creating humans were all of god's purposes fullfiled?A purpose? Multipurpose strikes me more in keeping with the nature of something, or someone, "omni."
It's a beautiful day, near perfect. I want some Ice Cream. My happiness would be perfect if I had some ice cream.IIn none of these is the implication present that a perfect being cannot have a desire ("want").
It's a beautiful day, near perfect. I want some Ice Cream. My happiness would be perfect if I had some ice cream.
Why would a perfect being want something?