Descartes' conclusion on God was right. His premises were...

What if there is only one being (god) playing the roles of all other beings (us)? How do you feel about that idea?

If god is dreaming, then everything is god (omnipresence) and god knows all (omniscience) and god has all the power because there is nothing that is not god in god’s dream. God is the guy sitting at the bar having a sword fight with himself with toothpicks because he’s bored lol

That’s a good point. So being is understanding is experiencing. Knowing and being are the same: I think therefore I am lol

Alright then I’ll focus on us and not our potential.

No. Us existing does not make God any more or less Perfect, Infinite, Omnipresent.

Yes

We don’t know God’s reasoning because we’re not God. The outline is that whatever it does, it does perfectly. God was perfect and it created us, no paradoxes in this. You make it sound like God needed to create us to accomplish being perfect. If that is what you’re implying, that is paradoxical.

Why? You’re imperfect. You can do something that makes you neither more or less imperfect. Have you done something absurd?

God is perfect. God creates us. This does not make God any more or less perfect. What’s the problem?

A) God doesn’t need to create us to be perfect. B) God is Perfect and it created us. In no way does B amount to: C) God needed to create us to be perfect. A is true, but B just happens to be the case.

Show me where I did this.

We are in agreement on this. Pantheism entails that God is Existence. Which is essentially saying that God is Omnipresent. So why do you consider omnipresence as amounting to non-existence?

The negation of everything is not a thing though. When you negate everything, are you still left with a thing? The negation of everything = non-existence and I agree, non-existence isn’t a thing. It’s absurd.

Omnipresence has clear meaning. Non-existence is the negation of meaning. Non-omnipresence is the negation of meaning. Omnipresence is not equal to non-omnipresence. That which is meaningful and that which is meaningless are not equal.

How does time come into existence from a state of non-existence? Consider the following:

Universe A is endless
Universe B is without time

Do they mean the same thing?

A will never run out of time. B never had time to begin with. Do you agree that there is a clear difference between A and B?

Infinity and nothing are not the same. Consider the following:

Existence A is infinite
Existence B is nothing/non-existent

A has always existed and will always exist. B has never existed and will never exist.
So, are A and B the same?

If the universe amounts to the following traits: Omnipotence, Infiniteness, Omnipresence, then the universe = everything that exists. If not, then the universe is not everything that exists.

In a 2D world that contains 2D rational agents, those agents won’t know what it’s like to be 3D. But they will still understand that Existence is necessarily Perfect, Infinite and Omnipresent (in length, width and time)

Not necessarily. If you have all the relevant senses/tools/capacity/potential to fully understand all the information, then you can know what it’s like to be thing X without actually being thing X.

True.

It’s true that you’d have to have all the potential and the capacity that the cat had. But this doesn’t amount to being the cat. You can be more than the cat. So long as your capacity and potential is not deficient in relation to the cat’s, then you can fully know what it’s like to be the cat without ever becoming the cat.

Actually, by definition, everything god does is perfect, which means creating us is part of that necessary perfection. Are you going to challenge gods perfection by saying that god is perfect by not making us? So what you say is that god is both perfect by not creating us and by creating us.

Since, in a practical sense, every being besides god would and wants to commit suicide (they just don’t have the means that they’d use). I would hardly call gods creation perfect. Remember, by your theology, god can only create imperfect beings forever and ever and ever.

You define perfection as the ability to ONLY create imperfection, forever and ever and ever.

This means god can’t even create gods own perfection!

How does the statement:

Your experience of life is different than gods and gods experience of life is different than yours.

Cause you to not just stop your argument?
And cause you to say “where did I say that?”

It’s a very simple statement, and you literally look silly with your “acrobatics” to avoid such a pure statement, naked in its truth.

Yes, everything God does is perfect (maximally good all things considered). There’s a clear distinction between:

  1. Being Perfect and doing Perfectly
  2. Doing something to become Perfect

The Perfect being remains Perfect provided that its traits that amount to true Perfection are unaltered. It’s creation of us does not alter its traits in any way.

2 is absurd. 1 is not. God created us, so it’s something that amounts to a maximally good outcome all things considered. This isn’t the only possible maximally good outcome with regards to our potential. It is one of many. Omnibenevolance can be exercised in endless ways.

You can’t consider all things because you lack omniscience. You can’t demonstrate how what you describe would ultimately amount to an objective instance of the maximum good not being brought about all things considered.

I define true Perfection as Omnipotent/Omniscient, Infinite, Omnipresent and Omnibenevolant (always doing that which brings about the maximum amount of good all things considered). Creating imperfect beings can amount to something maximally good all things considered.

God can’t create another God. That’s paradoxical.

You exist non-omnipresently whilst God exists Omnipresently. Are the Omnipresent and the non-omnipresent equal? No. So the potency/quality of their experiences are not the same are they?

Certainly real,

You’re still shuffling around the statement!

Gods experience of existence is different than yours
Your experience of existence is different than gods

This refutes omnipresence, it doesn’t support it.

God has to know exactly what it’s like to not be god in order to know exactly what it’s like to be anyone besides god.

Either god isn’t god, or you are god.

Both statements you consider absurd (though through indirect means, you’ve several times made god claims about yourself - which is why I liken you to the error free cult leader)

You’re also playing serious word games around another oh so simple statement …

Per your theology, it is impossible for god to make perfect beings, or anything perfect in a being (because to even have a slight perfection means that god isn’t above them in that one area - which to you is a contradiction) there is no maximal goodness to creating beings that can never achieve represent or embody perfection of any sort… it can only be described as minimal goodness or worse.

God is God and I’m a part of God. God knows me fully whilst I don’t know it fully.

God can know what my experiences are like because I am a part of God. I cannot know what God’s experiences are like because I’m not God, I’m just a part of God. I don’t have the capacity to know what being omnipresent is like whereas that which is omnipresent has the full capacity to know what non-omnipresence is like. You fail to pay sufficient attention to this point.

The notion of Existence as not being one Omnipresent thing is clearly paradoxical and you know it.

With Existence being omnipresent, omnipotence and omniscience are meaningful. You can’t fault one of these omni concepts without faulting the other. No rational agent will ever question or doubt the nature of Existence as being Omnipresent.

Just because no other being other than God can be Perfect, doesn’t mean the potential isn’t there for them to become very good. Consider infinity in length and width. Just because nothing other than God is Infinite, doesn’t mean you can’t have really large things. You can even have semi-infinitely large things. That is the nature of Existence. It can sustain all things things endlessly.

Let’s work on this bolder section first. You can’t know what it’s like to be omnipresent because no being can, because if we attempt to break the concept down, it solves as god being unable to be god in order to know exactly what it’s like to not be god.
Existence is fragmented

The contradiction is not with me, it’s always been with you when you say, “that which is omnipresent has the full capacity to know what being non-omnipresent is like.” No! That’s a contradiction.
It would have to cease being omnipresent, and nothing more, which by your definition it never does. I’ve been addressing this point the whole time.

You just keep trying, as if you say it enough times, that magically it’s not a fatal contradiction to your hypothesis.

I gave you a description of how everything is a part of Existence and how Existence is Omnipresent. And I gave you clear examples of how whilst Existence is clearly and necessarily Omnipresent and Infinite, we are clearly finite and non-omnipresent.

So I gave you clear examples of how the infinite can fully sustain the finite thereby having full reach and access to the finite (meaning that it fully knows what all finite entities and semi-finite entities amount to in full)

You’ve yet to give me a contradiction free description of the nature of Existence.

I already countered your bold point, which is just the same contradiction stated as truth as before.

There must be otherness in order for there to be existents, this otherness is in the form of fragmentation of presence. A lack of fragmentation of presence allows for no otherness.

You look at omnipresence as a tiered hierarchy instead of what it actually is, the same one thing in everything, which is nothing.

If there is a god, by laws of logic, it cannot be omnipresent.

You didn’t. What you asserted essentially amounted the following: Being a part of omnipresence means you’re not a part of omnipresence. What you suggest, amounts to a paradox and your attempt to define Existence makes this clear.

The same one thing in everything (No problems with this sentence. No paradoxes)
The same one thing in everything which is nothing. If you can’t see how this (your definition of existence) amounts to a paradox, then we’ll have to agree to disagree.

You recognise the necessity of the same one thing in everything but you deny omnipresence. Why? What problems did you see with my argument regarding varying levels of potency? God being the most potent (infinite) and everything else (semi-infinite, finite) being less potent versions of it.

Have an open mind. End dogma and you’ll see where you’re going wrong.

No I used the definition of omnipresence to prove that it’s fragmented, even for a hypothetical god, who also needs otherness to perceive itself. Otherness to perceive existence is a higher law than god, logic is GREATER than god, god needs us, is dependent upon us, to perceive god. Logic is the highest, not a being within logic. Logic is not self aware.

Of all your straw man replies thus far, this ones the worst.

If the same thing is in everything (a hypothetical), this solves as everything being exactly the same, which equals nothing.

If presence is fragmented, there’s no contradiction.

Youre the one blatantly posting direct contradictions as truth. I don’t open my mind to brainwashers

I gave you a logical distinction between levels of potency. Everything is the same thing but of varying levels of potency. If you don’t accept Existence as necessarily Omnipresent, then we’ll have to agree to disagree.

You’re avoiding the core issue with omnipresence again.

God, just like us, needs other to exist, in order to perceive being existant. This not only means that presence needs to be fragmented, it means that god is DEPEDANT upon us, all of us, like a little baby … in order to be god.

I only replied after the last post because I’m concerned that you’re trying to brainwash people into believing that you’re perfect by being “in” with god, which is the technique all cult leaders use.

I need to add to this, that god cannot exist without otherness. This is logic. Logic is more powerful than god. Logic is not aware of itself.

God is omnipresent within God, but not outside of God or else what is not-God would also be God. Omnipresence within finiteness is possible, but it’s infinite omnipresence where I’m having issues.

Yes the negation of everything is a thing. The negation of you is everything that is not you and the negation of everything that is not you is you. Negation represents the negative state of a dipole, so negative north would be south and neither could exist without the other because their existence is the manifestation of their relationship. Now if we say that north is omnipresent, then there is no room left for south and therefore north also couldn’t exist.

The negation of meaning is still meaningful and I’d describe nonexistence as absence of existence rather than a negative state of it.

Well, non-omnipresence is any presence less than ubiquitous. I am non-omnipresent.

I think the ubiquitous is equivalent to the absence. If every direction were up, then direction is meaningless. If time were infinite, then time would have no meaning.

They are complementary and codependent.

It doesn’t because there is no such thing as time outside the relationship of one thing to another thing. It takes me 1/24 revolution of the earth to drive to the next city, so the concept of time is just a placeholder for a ratio. If there is nothing around to compare time to, then time has no meaning.

If universe A is endless, then it is also beginningless since end and beginning are just arbitrary in relation to direction. Something that has neither beginning nor end is not relative to time and time has no bearing on it, so it’s independent of time meaning that time is meaningless and nonexistent… which is the defined state of universe B, so they are equivalent. Infinite time and lack of time are the same thing.

I think it’s a bad way to present the problem. Existence A is timeless (absence of time, but existent) and Existence B is nonexistent. So you’re saying one exists and the other doesn’t then ask me if they are the same and I don’t think that’s what you meant to do. I’m not saying timelessness is nonexistence, but nonexistence of time. I’m not saying that because something has been around forever that it doesn’t exist, but if it has, then time doesn’t exist because time is completely irrelevant to the thing and irrelevant things do not exist by definition because they are ir+relational like the pink elephant sitting next to me.

You could be right, but eventually we’re going to come down to the one thing that fundamentally exists in relation to absolutely nothing else otherwise it’s a Russian Doll of smaller universes inside larger ones infinitely, which ironically is saying the same thing because relation to the infinite is relation to nothing. What difference would it make? If north were ubiquitous such that it completely displaced south, then south doesn’t exist due to absence, but the north also doesn’t exist due to ubiquitousness. What difference does it make which is which?

If the universe is finite, then what is outside? Nothing because there is nothing that is not the universe.
If the universe is infinite, then what is outside? Nothing because it goes on forever.

What difference does it make?

So now what?

Obviously nothing must be in some way productive as its polar opposite is the universe and all that exists. Infinity doesn’t solve anything and if anything, it paints over the problem by obfuscating it in a cloud of the unimaginable (nothing - who can imagine nothing).

Where did your term “perfect” come from? What is perfect? Perfect in relation to what? Using “perfect” is like saying “optimized” without saying optimized for what. Taller than what? Hotter than what? Freedom from what? You can’t just have freedom without specifying freedom from what. Freedom from law is not freedom from crime and freedom from crime is being shackled by law. You’re trying to objectify relative terms as if they had abstract meaning. Time is another illustration of that as is space. You’re yanking out relative concepts and trying to make them stand on their own.

In order to know what it’s like to be a cat, I’d have to have all the sensory input of a cat and no other input. I couldn’t know that I am god too or I wouldn’t know what it’s like to be a cat. The only way to know what it’s like to be a cat is to be a cat.

This fits with Brahman, but not Yahweh. Brahman knows what it’s like to be everything because he is everything, but Yahweh can’t know much of anything since he isn’t anything but some abstractness outside the universe (whatever that means) who claims knowledge of things he’s never been and all sorts of paradoxical powers. If Yahweh made the universe, then he made it from himself and became the Brahman because he could not have made something from nothing, but rather he put something where nothing used to be (ie himself) and arranged it in interesting patterns… or maybe he let it go randomly for a surprise (that’s what I think - lack of purpose is the purpose otherwise there would be no purpose because why go through the trouble of making a movie you’ve seen before).

I think that is essentially it and better-worded than I could have done. God needs “other” in order for him to know he exists. I don’t think there is anyway around that, but what is “other”? What is not-god? What is the condition upon which god exists?

I have to say, I used other because it’s more concrete and also true.

The other for god, as I’ve stated many times in this thread is to not know EXACTLY what it’s like to be all beings, or any being for that matter.

I also want to compliment you on the idea that existence is relationship. I hadn’t been exposed to that specific thought and I find it beautiful and elegant.