B
bridgeforsale
Guest
what I was simply saying (in this regard) is those terms need to be qualified. There might be some compelling stuff out there making a plausible case for the idea of a consciousness beyond our awareness (call it god). And I’m glad to say, whether god-man or not, Jesus was a great guy with a great philosophy (at least in most cases). But if we assume this god created the universe, then when we look at nature and understand its processes, we’re witnessing his work right?Limited in one sense, and unlimited in another, yes. The premise that “every existing thing is either limited or unlimited,” however, refers to just one meaning - a thing’s level of power.
Therefore, his work is a random process, which spanned billions of years (at least in our temporal reference frame of time), and was completely random. In fact when you look at evolution it was so random the level of waste was 99.9%. Imagine that. Billions of years, trillions upon trillions of little trail and error events, describes how god built biological life. The construction of the universe was much the same. There’s an incredible amount of creative destruction in the universe. Is this likely the work of an omnipotent super-being whose power is all encompassing, who exists everywhere, all the time? I think the evidence suggest otherwise
Frankly, as I said, I’m not sure why we’d want to think god is all powerful anyway? I’d rather think he would have loved nothing more than to stop Hitler and Stalin, but was unable to do so; as opposed to thinking he could have stopped them yet for whatever reason elected to remain a spectator. I think disposing of the classical view of omnipotence (which is probably a Neo-Platonic innovation anyway) helps god make sense.