B
bridgeforsale
Guest
First of all I’m arguing that god is probably not omnipotent (not that he doesn’t exist). I think it’s safe to say those are two very different arguments. However, energy can just as easily fit the criteria of first cause (I see no basis to say it can’t), at least based on the information we have now. The latter question is a scientific one, not a philosophical question. In fact philosophy is probably more of an obstruction to science at this point than an able assistant.If you believe everything has a cause, then why did you float the idea that quantum fluctuations provide evidence that some things exist without a cause?And energy does not fit into the criteria, because somebody can always ask where energy came from. I have always limited God’s omnipotence in this discussion to His creation of the universe. Regardless of what you believe Aristotle’s definition of “omnipotence” to be, I don’t see how you could have a reasonable basis for denying the proposition that God is the ultimate cause of the universe.
I think what you’re saying here is if I witnessed science, using stem cell technology and some of the regenerative techniques that science actually is working with as we speak (for instance, limbs actually have been regenerated by science, it was only a finger, but the potential is amazing) I still wouldn’t believe god did it; and that’s simply not true. I would simply say it’s not necessary to think god did it (but, assuming god exists, and is an intelligent spirit of some sort, then yes I would assume he understood that we would progress to this point before he even created the universe in the first place). I would even say it’s possible that god influences our progress in very subtle ways, but this is really what I’m getting at. Very subtle ways is different than the monotheistic version of Zeus we sort of see in the bible. He’s not causing earthquakes and tossing thunder bolts down on us. We know what causes floods, earthquakes, and thunderbolts, and as far as we can tell it’s not a spirit in the sky.Because your method of induction logically (or not as the case may be) would allow you to come to the same conclusion. Your flawed method of inferring things from lack of evidence would allow you to conclude that God isn’t omnipotent regardless of whether you observed him create ex nihilo or not. More to the point, in an earlier post you affirmed your belief in the ability of science to regenerate a severed limb. Even if you personally witnessed the regrowth of an amputated limb, you would attribute it to a natural cause - perhaps aided by the human scientific intervention. What is garbage is your suggestion that if you saw a human limb spontaneously regenerate, suddenly you would be a believer in God. That is garbage.
Fair enough (not a point that seems worth our continued quibbling over).I doesn’t matter if you place modifying language in your proposition. It is still an absolute. It is absolutely true according to you that “as a general rule, it’s fallacious to assert an absolute …” Then it is absolutely true that as a general rule it is fallacious to assert an absolute. It is still the assertion of an absolute. And you do assert an absolute below with respect to the First Law of Thermodynamics.
Great, but I think it’s fair to acknowledge that’s not a necessary conclusion (although I do think there’s some compelling evidence out there, which cannot be reasonably explained in any other way, besides acknowledging we may very well have a soul and there may very well be a god or something of some sort).I’m not making any statement about omnipotence other than this: the existence of the universe had a cause, and that cause is what we call God. I’ve not made any other claim about God’s omnipotence than this. Not that he is a personal being. Not that he heals amputees. Nothing of the sort.
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What are you expecting here? Do you want me to endorse a particular cosmological theoryThat is your issue. It isn’t Aristotle’s, Aqunias’, or mine. Even if you were correct about Aristotle on this issue - so what? How about deal with what ultimately caused the existence of the universe. That is all I, me, tdgesq, has ever asked of you. Are you going to deal with it or not?
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