Will Theists Accept A God That is Inferior to Another's?

The term “perfection” fits in perfectly for my premises.
Note the meaning of ‘perfect’
dictionary.com/browse/perfect?s=t

There is range of meanings within the word ‘perfect’ but you seem to be sticking only to one meaning.

The point here is we can have relative perfection but these are conditioned to the criteria set and agreed by a group of people.

The above is not an impossibility albeit odds are very very slim. The point this is nevertheless a relative perfection when agreed by a group of people but set with more higher standard.

The critical point here is the understanding of the difference between ‘absolute perfection’ [applicable only for God] versus ‘relative perfection’.

I believe you are setting up an impossible ultimate limit, i.e.

ALL that you would need to know for certain about Existence itself in order to know what this entails …

This is an expectation that can only be achieved by an omniscient God [if exists].

In this case, you will not be above to resolve your problem because of wrong view and wrong thought. [note the Generic 4NT-8FP problem solving technique highlighted the Dassein thread].

Note I mentioned Russell’s there is no definite answers in philosophy, thus to expect ALL you need to know with certainty is rather a moot point.
Even if one think they have ALL the answers, there is not such thing a “certain” answers to any question - note Wittgenstein’s ‘On Certainty’.

I believe it is a mistake to establish an ultimate limit to knowledge and create a GAP out of the difference between the known and the unknown [which is an empirical impossibility] in this particular case. [acceptable perhaps for consideration of morality].

Therefore the way you are setting up the problem will lead you into a wild goose chase.

Effectively we should always ground our problems on the known and extend outward into the possible unknown, not the impossible unknown as you have done. This is what the Buddha meant by one creating their own dukkha [problem].
This is also how Science proceeds to gain knowledge grounded on its Scientific Framework [with processes, assumptions, etc.]

I believe if you do a paradigm-shift to such a paradigm you would probably gain more equanimity, comfort and ease in facing whatever the problem.
This is what the Buddha did, i.e. shifted in a 180 degree paradigm shift from relying on an external God for salvation to inward within the self to resolve the existential dilemma.

Note your ALL and ‘obligated’ again which set an ultimate limit.
In this case, the target is the majority or a critical mass not ALL [100%].
Note the principles of the Bell Curve, human variables will always be widely distributed, i.e. we cannot expect ALL humans to be 6 feet tall, or 80 kilo in weight.

Prism, this is the reference that you gave for “perfect”;

Note that there is no conditional, but there is a “description of an ideal”. So we are back to the fact that your definitions are screwy.

When I first explained that to you, you refused it, saying that such a definition involving an ideal is only “conditional”. And yet right there from your own reference, it clearly states “absolute”.

And as explained to you long ago, there is no “absolutely perfect” because that is redundant;
absolutely conforming absolutely to the description of an ideal”.
Nor is there a “conditionally perfect” as that would be an oxymoron;
conditionally conforming absolutely to the description of an ideal.

But beyond that, the term “absolute perfection” has no descriptor or ideal mentioned. It is an incomplete thought. And thus certainly not a definition of anything.

So when you say,
“P1- Absolute perfection is impossible”
You have made a nonsense statement (as was explanation to you from the beginning). It is like saying;
“P1- Absolutely Larger than is impossible”

The first premise that you give is false
“P1- Absolute perfection is impossible”

And even if it made sense, you would not be able to prove it to be true. It would still be an invalid premise.

[list]Thus your syllogism is INVALID.[/list:u]
And all of this was explained to you long ago. But now even YOU provided a correct definition which shows WHY you have been wrong this entire time.

Note my reply to the above exposing your deception;
viewtopic.php?p=2689433#p2689433

Note my reminder;

I gave several examples on how it might be used, ffs.

If those examples are the same as the one I highlighted

then we should be in agreement with how I used the term perfect in my P1 and P2.

The above ‘perfect’ is applied to what is in the empirical world, but for a God which is supposedly infallible, such a God cannot be attributed with ‘relative perfection’ for humans, thus the ‘perfection’ attributed to a God must be absolute, i.e. unconditional.

By reason,
P1. Absolute perfection is an impossibility [within an empirical-rational reality]
P2. God imperatively must be absolutely perfect.
C… Therefore God is an impossibility [within an empirical-rational reality]

As I had stated,
since by reason the above is not tenable, there is no way one can even start to consider God exists as a hypothesis, i.e. God exists is moot and a non-starter within empirical-rational reality.

The real reason why God exists within the consciousness of the human majority is due to inherent psychological reasons. I have provided evidences for this.

And note mine at Your syllogism is an intentional deception.

And Prism, let’s not forget;

By your own definition of “Truth”, “intersubjective consensus”, you are wrong because everyone here agrees that you are wrong.

As I had said many times, your philosophical views as posted here are very shallow and narrow.
E.g. there are 10 meanings of ‘perfect’ in the dictionary, but you prefer the narrow and shallow path of merely choosing only one when there are so many related meanings which I had intended to use.

And as I told you, everyone one of those defining clauses are meant to agree. They are not different uses for the same word, merely varied ways of explaining it. You attempt to leave out the two that clarify the issue because they prove you wrong.

You do realize that all you are saying is that the real god (if He/She/It exists) doesn’t have this particular characteristic of absolute perfection which you and some theists insist that He must have.

IOW, you not disproving the existence of God, you’re disproving the existence of an absolutely perfect God. (and “absolutely perfect” is your own definition of perfection)

You have not shown that at all. Although it may well be true.

Which two?

Btw, where do you get the idea all the meanings listed in a dictionary for one word must all agree?
Note:
dictionary.com/browse/gay; homosexuality, joyful
dictionary.com/browse/general; common, a rank in military, etc.

I agree with your points above.

My argument is very specific to only an absolutely perfect God.
I stated God-proper regardless must ultimately be an absolutely perfect God.

Thus if you claim a God that is not absolutely perfect God and has empirical elements, then my argument will not apply.
When you impute empirical elements [not absolutely absolute elements] into a God, then such a God is empirically possible.
But an empirical God by definition will be an inferior God to a God that is absolutely perfect. If you accept your God is an inferior God, that is your prerogative but such an empirical God will be subjected to the command of the superior God to kiss its arse.

For example you can believe in an anthropological [empirical] God like 'the gigantic bearded man in the sky, I will agree such an empirical based god is possible. Note below.

But the point is, rationally, the possibility of such a God existing is 0.00…1 probable.

However the final test is, since it is empirical based, then bring the evidence [exactly as describe] for empirical testing and verification.

Theists can describe their God with whatever empirical qualities which not an impossibility, but the final test is bring the evidence to justify the empirical existence of God.

Besides the empirical God faced the question of ‘Who created that God’ and thus ending with an infinite regression which only reason can resolve.

Either way, it is checkmate situation for the theists’ claim God exists.

As I has claimed, the only possible reason for how the idea of God arise in the consciousness of humans is due to psychological impulses driven by an existential crisis. You may have missed the explanations and evidences I provided to support this point.
See: viewtopic.php?f=5&t=193697
I have given links in other posts, e.g. this amongt others

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qIiIsDIkDtg[/youtube]

I am repeating myself, but, a lesser but kind god is preferable compared to a cruel god that was more strong and intelligent than the first.
I’m most familiar with Jehovah’s Witness conception of might makes right.
Because he created you, he owns you, and you are a slave that must obey or die.

The reference is to greatest and an omni-good God which will do no wrong.

Again, note some specific examples. You thought one thing and then others come along able to persuade you to think something else instead.

Note particular instances of this: [b]Not the details so much as the ideas themselves — important ideas that were reconfigured.[/b]

As, for example, folks [and new experiences] came along reconfiguring my Christianity into Marxism into Leninism into Trotskyism into Democratic Socialism into Social Democracy into existentialism into nihilism.

Though [of course] once you acknowledge it, you are acknowledging in turn that it may well happen again. That there are other ideas you have here and now just waiting for someone to come along and reconfigure.

But let’s be clear…

Are you in fact acknowledging that RM/AO is not the optimal or the only rational manner in which to grasp human interactions out in a particular world?

That new experiences and new relationships and new sources of knowledge/information etc., may well come along in your life and change it?

Which is basically my own frame of mind here.

Also, as I note with Prism, is there or is there not a gap [large or small] between what you think you know about all of this here and now and all that any mere mortal would need to know about the existence of Existence itself in order make that gap go away?

Is there even a small possiblity that RM/AO is just one more run of the mill psychological contraption that allows you to subsume “I” in but one more run of the mill rendition of Certainty.

Certainty on this side of the grave intertwined somehow in your head with the Real God on the other side of it.

But this is still basically just an intellectual contraption. How is it actually relevant to the many, many moral and political conflicts that are engaged right here at ILP? Between, among others, the conservatives and the liberals.

How, for example, would you connect the dots between RM/AO and the policies of Donald Trump?

Are you ever really willing to bring the “definitional logic” embedded in these epistemological contraptions out into the world of our day to day interactions?

[b]Note to others:

Sure, maybe he has done so. I don’t read all of his posts. Note particular examples that he has conveyed regarding RM/AO’s pertinence to the is/ought world.[/b]

Sure, given the sheer complexity of human psychology in a world bursting at the seams with all those equally complex interactions between genes and memes, it’s certainly possible that you have come closer to encompassing me than I have to encompassing you.

We can only allow others here to make up their own minds about that.

And, indeed, on this side of the grave, I am [here and now] still hopelessly entangled in my dilemma. And far, far, far removed from the comfort and the consolation that comes with Certainty. And, yes, it can be rather frightening when you have “succeeded” in thinking yourself into believing that we live in an essentially absurd and meaningless world that ends for all of eternity in the obliteration of “I”.

You got me there. That is what I have managed to think myself into believing is probably true regarding the “human condiditon”.

But I still speculate in turn that what “frightens” objectivists of your ilk is that before you manage to drag me up out of the hole that I have dug myself into, I will somehow manage to drag you down into it with me.

Still, that doesn’t make either one of our own contraptions here any less problematic. At least not until someone is able to actually demonstrate conclusively that what they think Reality is, is in fact what Reality is.

In other words, not just in their heads.

So what if there is a gap?

You go out and learn about the world and you try to reduce the gap.

But it never goes away. Then you die.

So what?

Why did you ignore the ones that I gave?

That’s why I “verify” until there is nothing left to question or change.

The fundamentals of RM/AO are immutable, but extended unproven theories can be modified, corrected, or just abandoned. For example (and don’t ignore it this time) we were talking about the cause of red-shift. I proposed the theoretical possibility of a fading away of the blue from the light by a particular mechanism. Phyllo suggest a different possible mechanism. When I heard his theory, it was clear to me that his theory was more probable than mine, although the theories were not exclusive, so both would have influence. So after that, I kept watching for any details concerning the issue and eventually just accepted the much higher probability that phyllo’s theory was the most significant and right.

But you should realize that in RM/AO there are thoughts that absolutely must be true and others that are mere extended personal theory. That is something that you don’t seem to get. You appear to say “well if anything was wrong, everything might be wrong”. That is false reasoning. There are different kinds of thoughts, some of which can never be wrong.

What is “optimal” is contingent upon the circumstances. And there are many “rational” ways to explain the same reality. RM/AO is merely one ontology that, unlike public physics theories, is “complete”.

I don’t know what you mean by “about the existence of Existence”, but any “gaps” concerning RM/AO and fundamental existence are relatively insignificant. RM/AO answers many questions that public physics currently cannot answer without disagreeing with anything they have observed. RM/AO is a completion of Science, not a substitute.

Any actual thinking is, to you, an “intellectual contraption”. So who cares.

I have done that many times. Such things are not your concern. Your priority is casting doubt and insecurity, so stick with it.

That seems to be your comfort zone, so you are certainly not interested in leaving it behind.

Not a chance.

“Demonstrate conclusively” is in the eyes of the beholder and guess what. You have demonstrated that you have no interest at all in getting out of your own dasien “contraption”.

All thoughts are “just in your head”.

I am all for Gap Management, i.e. between what is planned/intended and what is actually achieved, and to reduce the gap. This is critical for life as when one failed to plan, one had already planned to fail.

But as I had highlighted to iambiguous in the Dassein thread, his idea of
all that any mere mortal would need to know about the existence of Existence itself” in order make that gap go away …
is an impossibility. So his proposition is not tenable.

For example with Science, we start from knowledge of the scientifically known and extrapolate from the known to the possible-to-be-known.
The “ALL” that iambiguous set up is an impossibility to be achieved or known.
This “ALL” is the same with the idea of God which is an impossibility.

The only exception for the requirement of ‘ALL’ is within the absolute morals of Philosophical of Morality.

In other cases, it would be more effective in life to adopt the Principles of Continuous Improvement from the current state -in baby steps or quantum leaps - toward possible goals [not impossible ones as iambiguous is expecting].

In general, when one set impossible goals and expect to achieve it or even near it, one is merely bringing sufferings to oneself.

From my point of view though, the critical point revolves around distinguishing between perfection we can point to empirically in the world around us, and perfection that is sheer speculation regarding an entity that one merely has faith in the existence of.

Or defines into existence. Or infers into existence by way of an intellectual contraption.

Then it’s back to this:

Yes, and this is applicable to each and everyone of us, each and every time we speculate about these things. The limitations of philosophy [and even of science so far] seems of paramount importance here.

There’s human knowledge able to be verified; and then there’s conjecture. Conjecture embedded in the unknown unknowns.

Okay, but this doesn’t make the gap go away. There either is or there is not an “ultimate limit” of knowledge. And that either is or is not within reach of the human species here on earth.

How is it not reasonable then to set up the problem in this manner?

On the other hand, in my view, there are any number of objectivists who “solve” the problem by concocting one or another “world of words”; one or another set of intellectual assumptions. Here what is said to be true basically revolves around the definition and the meaning that they give to the words themselves.

Then others are invited up into the clouds to debate these definitions.

Okay, but: I have no idea how “for all practical purposes” this is relevant to either the dilemma that I am faced with on this side of the grave or the obliteration of “I” on the other side of it.

How is this sort of “salvation” relevant to the conflicting goods embedded in the issues I raise or to death itself?

And however theists debate the superiority of the Gods, they all have to eventually get around to the part about immortality and salvation. If only because that is basically religion in a nutshell.