QUOTE=Bahman;12052851 ]
Quote: ]
Originally Posted by KingCoil View Post
I am just interested to motivate you to see into the self-contradiction of your challenge, namely:
“Can God choose to do an act so evil He cannot do it?”
Which is in the same category as this one:
Code:
"Can God create a rock so heavy He cannot carry it?"
/quote ]
His point is to take your point to contradiction as you notice. It is contrary because the we accept that God is good so how God could create something which can do evil accepting that that is God who is omnipotence, not us.
The main question is: Can God create a being who could do something that God cannot? The answer is either yes or no. You mentioned that that this contrary hence God cannot create a being that which can do evil.
The answer “yes” is also contrary since the creation in general is an integration of good and evil otherwise we cannot do evil, yet God is good so how we could perform evil?
/QUOTE ]
Dear Bahman, let us work out this conundrum with precision and few clear words.
The generic question, “Can God create a rock so heavy He cannot carry?”
That kind of a challenge is at the basis of all such challenges to God whereby God is shown to be not omnipotent, and wherefore in effect there is no God.
You see, there are two clauses in the statement, “Can God create a rock so heavy He cannot carry?”
The whole statement is self-contradictory, meaning that the speaker is contradicting himself, he is talking gibberish, because he is speaking with no coherence and consistency: so that if he were into giving a command of that nature, the person whom he orders to execute such an order will not know what exactly he wants him to do.
At the basis of this fallacy, yes it is a fallacy, is the transit from interactions between humans to interactions between God and humans, where God is portrayed as also a human.
Will you continue to analyze the statement from that point onward, that in the statement “Can God create a rock so heavy He cannot carry?” there is an illicit transit from interactions between humans to interactions between God and humans where God is taken to be also a human.
I notice that Centerpoint has not reacted to my invitation to him to do a close analysis of his challenge, perhaps he sees the light and now chooses silence.
KingCoil