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Author | Topic: The Concept of God -- Need Logic Help | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Prince Thrash Junior Member (Idle past 5014 days) Posts: 9 Joined: |
I am new to your forums, and am unsure if this topic is relevant for your site. However, your members are fairly even-headed (based on an EXTREMELY quick flip-through) and I could use some help with this argument. Please poke holes in it, or help strengthen it. Haha, it could use some brevity — any programmers out there?
So here it goes: The concept of God in the Abrahamic world is of a being that is: 1) Omnipotent2) Omniscient 3) Omnibenevolent Step 1: Simplification (not totally necessary, but I find it makes things neater) Any being that is Omnipotent will make itself omniscient. Or at least, omniscience is in the grasp of anything omnipotent. In other words, let us eliminate "omniscience", because it borders on redundant. God also has the best sense of humour, the biggest pool, the best summer home — but we do not say these things are essential. An omnipotent entity, such as God or anything, would be seduced instantly into omniscience, and it seems unfathomable to think otherwise. So our revised, simplified concept of God is: 1) Omnipotent2) Omnibenevolent Step 2: Analysis of the Interaction of These Two Ingredients of God Premise 1Omnipotence need not be expressed. It can simply be potential. God is not, for instance, using his omnipotence constantly. Otherwise everything and anything would be happening incessantly. Our only demand for an omnipotent being is that it COULD do anything and everything. Premise 2As an omnibenevolent entity, God does good things. In fact, there is another step we get to infer. As an omnibenevolent entity, unlike a morally ambiguous entity like a human, or merely a ‘benevolent’ entity, God is pre-determined to do the best thing he can, and since he is all-powerful, this is the best thing objectively possible. Now, he has to do it all in one piece, all of time and space at once in one big ‘best’ image he can (Leibniz argued this if I remember right). Premise 3If a being is omnipotent, they have power over all things, including themselves. Premise 4An omnibenevolent entity must do what is best. God cannot do what is wrong. Step 3: Conclusion Because of our assumptions about the nature of omnibenevolence, God is unable to escape its dictates. Therefore God lacks the free will that us morally ambiguous humans get (thank God). As a result, he lacks power over himself. Which means he lacks omnipotence. What this shows is that in the very concept of God there is a contradiction. No Bible contradictions, nothing so flimsy — rather, right in the very concept of God there is confusion. What we can say, simply, is that a being might be omnibenevolent, or a being might be omnipotent, but it cannot be both, for the omnibenevolence kills the omnipotence by shrinking the potential ability of the entity. As an omnibenevolent entity, there are things which God cannot do. Doesn’t this mean we must pick? We must believe either in a God of Goodness, or a God of Power? (Equally, any all-evil — omnimalevolent -- entity would also lack the possibility of omnipotence) Edited by Admin, : Remove email notification.
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Admin Director Posts: 13036 From: EvC Forum Joined: Member Rating: 2.1 |
Thread copied here from the The Concept of God -- Need Logic Help thread in the Proposed New Topics forum.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17827 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3
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I'm sorry to say that I don't think that this argument is very good, nor do I see any obvious way to patch it up.
quote: I think that you are missing a point here. Omnibenevolence is supposed to be an aspect of God's character, not something imposed upon God. Thus in doing what is best God is simply doing what he wants to do - and it is hard to see that as a clear violation of free will. Taking this into account let's look at something you said earlier:
quote: Now obviously the distinction is that God would do the things that he wanted to do and would not do the things he didn't want to do. So, if the only reason why God doesn't do something is that he doesn't want to, then he would still be omnipotent. Just to be clear, not wanting to do something must be the ONLY reason God doesn't do it. If God couldn't do something even if he did want to - even something he would never want to do - then he would not be omnipotent. But simply not doing something he doesn't want to do isn't a problem. So we come back to the point that omnibenevolence is about what God wants to do. And because it is about what God wants to do, rather than God having to do the best thing no matter what he wants there is no conflict between omnipotence and omnibenevolence.
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Dr Adequate Member (Idle past 311 days) Posts: 16113 Joined:
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I agree with Paul. The "vol" in "omnibenevolence" means will (and in fact has the same Indo-European root as our English word "will"). So it means that God's will is to do good.
To will one thing rather than another cannot be seen as a constraint on one's freedom of will without rendering the concept of "free will" meaningless --- no-one's will can be so free as to be free of their will. Further, you write:
Our only demand for an omnipotent being is that it COULD do anything and everything. Now I think that the ambiguity of this has mislead you. For there are two ways of reading "COULD do anything and everything": (1) Could, in principle, do whatever it wants. (2) Has an actual possibility of doing something that it doesn't want to do. Case (1) is omnipotence. Case (2) would actually be contrary to omnipotence --- a being that does something that it doesn't want to do would not be omnipotent. It would have the divine equivalent of Tourette's syndrome, being unable to control even its own actions.
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killinghurts Member (Idle past 5020 days) Posts: 150 Joined: |
"Prince Thrash" writes:
Doesn’t this mean we must pick? We must believe either in a God of Goodness, or a God of Power?
There is another option, which satisfies all logic... don't pick anything.
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Prince Thrash Junior Member (Idle past 5014 days) Posts: 9 Joined: |
Thanks for your input.
Would you disagree that God's goodness, then, does not predetermine his actions? Is God not, like gravity and unlike man in some conceptions, perfectly predictable? The entity in question, in fact, need have no mind? Need have no choice? Because the end result is identical. I think the "God's will" argument is being used with too many free-will implications from the get-go. It is the Will itself which is the very vehicle of control; the method by which the entity is controlled by Good. Remember that Hindu thinker, what was his name? Vivekananda I think? He was a classic determinist, and monist -- classic Hinduism -- but he argued that the roots of predetermination of a being happen *before* the will. They *inform* the will WHAT to will. Though I dont personally hold to this idea necessarily, I think it shows that simply because there is such and such a thing that one might call a "will", this does not make this will "free". From this angle, God does what he wants to do, while Good informs him of what that will be. God would not be conquered and directed by Goodness, unless Goodness owned that very will. Haha, this is a funny situation, because in your responses, you very nicely show how God is controlled, yet in opposition to my initial argument. I, oddly, see these particular refutations as detailed affirmations concerning the HOW of God's slavery. killinghurts: whether or not there is a God doesn't really matter. Think of this as a question of "if there is a god, what types of attributes are possible?" Edited by Prince Thrash, : No reason given.
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Blue Jay Member (Idle past 2724 days) Posts: 2843 From: You couldn't pronounce it with your mouthparts Joined: |
Hi, Prince Thrash.
Welcome to EvC!
Prince Thrash writes: I think the "God's will" argument is being used with too many free-will implications from the get-go. It is the Will itself which is the very vehicle of control; the method by which the entity is controlled by Good. So, what you're saying is that free will isn't a will, per se, but a compulsion?It sounds like you’re trying to define free will as not free will." Remember that the whole concept of free will is that there is no explanation for the actions of an entity other than that the entity chose to act in that way. Chalking their actions up to a personality, demeanor, compunction or other such syndrome is a deterministic approach, and determinism is the exact opposite of free will. Edited by Bluejay, : Added second paragraph for clarification. Edited by Bluejay, : swapped out "concept" for "approach." -Bluejay (a.k.a. Mantis, Thylacosmilus) Darwin loves you.
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Prince Thrash Junior Member (Idle past 5014 days) Posts: 9 Joined: |
Bluejay,
Thanks for showing that I needed to clarify. What I am saying, is that "will" does not imply "free will". The two are distinct. The second response to my initial post implied that "will" is one in the same with "free will". Saying "X has a Will" does not mean that "X has free will". If you think it does, I'd be interested. I said this, because as was pointed out, the "vol" in "omnibenevolence" means "will" (such as in vol-ition). My reference to Vivenkananda was an attempt to show that others have argued that there can be an "unfree will". Edited by Prince Thrash, : No reason given. Edited by Prince Thrash, : Removed references to a John Wilmot play.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17827 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3 |
quote: Presumable you mean perfectly predictable to someone with perfect knowledge. However, I would say that the same is likely true for all intelligent beings anyway.
quote: If you assume that Good is itself an intelligent being, above and beyond God then you''re not talking about any recognisable theology.But if you don't assume that then your point doesn't really make a lot of sense. You might as well say that your will is an "instrument of control" by which your personality controls your actions. quote: Whether you go for determinism or not it seems pretty clear that aspects of your personality inform your will. In fact it must be so for you to have any will worthy of the name.
quote: What is really funny is that is that your idea of "free will" seems to be all "freedom" and no will. A being that acted completely randomly, without conscious thought or any concern for it's own wants would seem to be your ideal of "freedom". But such a being lacks free will in any meaningful sense, and might be better described as a slave to chance.
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Dr Adequate Member (Idle past 311 days) Posts: 16113 Joined: |
I think the "God's will" argument is being used with too many free-will implications from the get-go. It is the Will itself which is the very vehicle of control; the method by which the entity is controlled by Good. [...] From this angle, God does what he wants to do, while Good informs him of what that will be. God would not be conquered and directed by Goodness, unless Goodness owned that very will. If I want to eat a cheese sandwich, is that free will, or is that the "very vehicle of control", the method by which I am controlled by cheese sandwiches?
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Prince Thrash Junior Member (Idle past 5014 days) Posts: 9 Joined: |
DrAdequate:
(Will get to other post, just busy right now and it needs more attention) In your example, it is obvious that hunger is the "vehicle of control". You chose the sandwich, but you only did so because your hunger forced you into making such a choice. Your choice was simply the FORM your intellect took in satisfying demands far outside of its control. In other words, you could have chosen to eat something other than a sandwich, but in no way could you have simply decided not to be hungry or chosen to no longer motivated towards food by hunger. Edited by Prince Thrash, : No reason given. Edited by Prince Thrash, : No reason given.
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Dr Adequate Member (Idle past 311 days) Posts: 16113 Joined: |
In your example, it is obvious that hunger is the "vehicle of control". You chose the sandwich, but you only did so because your hunger forced you into making such a choice. Your choice was simply the FORM your intellect took in satisfying demands far outside of its control. In other words, you could have chosen to eat something other than a sandwich, but in no way could you have simply decided not to be hungry or chosen to no longer motivated towards food by hunger. You have ignored the possibility that I am not hungry, but a gourmand motivated by self-indulgent gluttony. If you think that unlikely, you should taste one of my cheese sandwiches. Lucullus himself could have desired no more. However, if this example leaves you unpersuaded, what if I want to listen to the second Brandenburg Concerto? Am I being controlled, via my will, by the object to which my will is directed? Who's in charge round here, me or J. S. Bach?
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Blue Jay Member (Idle past 2724 days) Posts: 2843 From: You couldn't pronounce it with your mouthparts Joined: |
Hi, Prince Thrash.
Prince Thrash writes: What I am saying, is that "will" does not imply "free will". The two are distinct. They are not really distinct. The word "free" is redundant. Any "will" is a "free will": the only question is whose "will" it is. If the "will" is imposed on God by some external force or entity, then, by definition, it is not God's will, but the will of that external force or entity. So, in attributing the "will" to God, you are directly stating that it is not imposed on Him by some external force or entity. But, if you still want to make the case that God's "will" is not "free will," then you restrict yourself to discussing concepts of God that nobody actually believes in, and your argument is thus irrelevent to the people you seem to want to convince. -Bluejay (a.k.a. Mantis, Thylacosmilus) Darwin loves you.
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Prince Thrash Junior Member (Idle past 5014 days) Posts: 9 Joined: |
Dr. Adequate,
I think you misunderstood the general meaning of what I meant. But I can see how I was over-specific. Replacing "hunger" with "gluttony" changes nothing. You have X, a motivating factor, leading to Y, action. I subbed in "hunger" as that motivating factor. It seems that we both agree on this issue -- that there is a motivating factor, and I say this because you subbed in one of your own. Though you example of music is more cleverly difficult, but again, we can imagine a gambit of motivating factors leading one to music (boredom is a good one, but one of many, as you pointed out). You and BlueJay need to discuss this issue, because BlueJay believes that a motivating factor is a type of determinist agent. As he said, even the presence of the "personality" is counter to free will. To this I would say, since God has a personality, one of omnibenevolence without possibility of deviation, his free will is negated. BlueJay: I believe you've inferred that I'm trying to convince some specific group? I think it is irrelevant if some group actually believes, or specifically disbelieves, in this image of God I am trying to argue for. Most atheism, for instance, is 'negative atheism' -- they let the theists give the image, and then they refute it. Nothing wrong with that. But what I am doing is a type of replacement, or positive, theology in an atheist-type of spirit. It's a bit weird, I know, but shouldn't an atheist be allowed to pick which concept of God they do not believe in, and which are simply impossible? It's a weird approach, but I don't see why I require a pre-existing theology. BlueJay: Again, the "will" can be said to be phenomenally apparent. We can 'feel" a will-type thing. Arguable, but I'd go with it. The *freedom* of that will, however, must be deduced/applied to that phenomenon, and is not evident within the phenomenon itself. If you can "feel the freedom" of your will, prior to Western teachings that it is free, please let me know how. Edited by Prince Thrash, : No reason given.
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PaulK Member Posts: 17827 Joined: Member Rating: 2.3 |
quote: I think that you fail to understand the point. Hunger, as a need of the body, is often seen as something external to the mind. Which would arguably make it a restriction on free will. By replacing it with a desire that is generated within the mind, that issue is removed.
quote: You have a very odd idea of free will. Surely free will is doing what you choose, without external constraints, such as coercion. If there isn't a personality - you - making choices, how can it even be called will ?
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