R
rossum
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By describing God as omniscient you are limiting God by removing all non-omniscience from God. In this case the example I used was the ability to learn something new. We can do this bacause we are not omniscient; God cannot. If we describe God as having a property X, then we remove from God everything included in non-X. Every description includes the removal of everything contrary to that description and hence a limitation of God.I don’t understand how anyone should limit the concept of God when attributing omniscience to it.
I do not claim any imperfection in God, I merely claim a limitation implicit in any explicit description of God. If God is omniscient then He obviously knows everything. What He then cannot do is to learn something new, or to relearn something He has forgotten.It is you who claims that there is an imperfection in God - that he doesn’t know everything yet.
Not me, it is the language that is doing the limiting.In my view it is you who does the limiting here.
Haldane said, “The universe is not only stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine.” God is not only more perfect than we imagine, He is more perfect than we can imagine. God is not limited by the boundaries of human imagination.God is by defintion the most perfect being imaginable. There is no limiting here
rossum