F
fosio
Guest
I wouldn’t as you know. I think all concrete objects are physical. If a concrete object is immaterial then it’s hard to see how it would be distinguished from an abstract object ontologically in its intrinsic properties.So the crucial problem here is space-relations. If angels (I’m assuming most of us agree that angels are completely immaterial)
I think you don’t find my argument sound because we simply have divergent intuitions about the nature of qualia. Here is a hypothetical quale that would not be physical in its intrinsic experience: a quale that involves the perception of an abstract object without the use of auditory or visual imagery or metaphor and without the use of language (since the symbols of language must be distinguished in some auditory, visual or other kind of physical imagery). I suppose such a quale could exist but then it wouldn’t be a perception of a concrete object. But God has perceptions of all concrete objects and so he must have qualia that give the full breadth and depth of perception on those objects (color, shape, etc.) – even if these aren’t caused by physical things, the perceptions themselves involve physicality (shape, color, etc.)
- Say that God and angels are physical
This is an interesting option, but I don’t know how plausible it is. In his thread on a proof of God’s existence, Fosio offered an argument based on qualia to prove that God is physical. I didn’t find the argument sound (see thread for my reply), but perhaps there is a way to prove the supposed physical nature of God and angels.
But there is another argument that proves God is physical. Something cannot come from nothing, i.e. the ontological nature of something cannot come from something that lacks that ontological nature. So physicality cannot come from something that lacks physicality. Radically new ontological constitutions don’t simply pop into existence out of nowhere; omnipotence is not an explanation for that since omnipotence itself is rationally guided and such things would not be in accordance with good reason. The way I view creation would be similar to Bonaventure in seeing creation as flowing from God as opposed to “ex nihilo.” Creation flows from God’s creative energies. There is nothing in creation that has no ontological grounding in God. There is no ontological way of being in creation that you cannot find ontologically in God; if there were, then creation would have something that God didn’t, something would be missing in God yet present in creation. Our physicality does not take away from our perfection; we are the more perfect for it. If dualism were true and we became souls we would not then increase in perfection for lacking physicality; we would decrease in perfection. So, we must eliminate the false intuition we have that physicality would diminish God’s perfection.
I don’t see how this is true (the inference, not the conclusion). One can certainly imagine physical things that never change. There’s certainly a possible world where there is a particle that never changes.Keep in mind that if God is ultimately physical He is subject to change, and this change with presumably be natural so even God could not help the way nature is and affects Him.
But I think it’s easy to see that God changes. God did not have to create anything; yet he did. Then on the principle of sufficient reason, what would account for his deciding to create? It could not be something other than God since that would violate logical priority, obviously. It also could not be something in God since if it were, then that would be in God in every possible world if God has both intra and inter-world immutability as regards his intrinsic properties. So then either the principle of sufficient reason fails or God changes. The only way to avoid that conclusion is to say that God creates in every possible world or that creation is included in the extension of God.
God can be everlasting and transcend the time in the space-time universe while also having temporality be a mode of his being. There are theories that postulate more than one dimension of time. As for omnipotence, I’m not sure what you are getting that from. If anything the incapacity to change would count against omnipotence. Life is more powerful than non-life precisely in its ability to change.This of course calls to question His omnipotence and eternal nature.
The way to understand omnipotence is to understand it as being in possession of all capabilities. Being able to change does not preclude being able to stay the same, so possession of this capability does not take away any other conceivable capability. Being unable to change, obviously precludes being able to change; so omnipotence entails both the capacity to change and the capacity to stay steadfast.