Moderator: Dan~
Simple =
- Easily understood or done; presenting no difficulty.
- Plain, basic, or uncomplicated in form, nature, or design; without much decoration or ornamentation.
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/simple
In monotheistic thought, God is conceived of as the supreme being, creator deity, and principal object of faith.[3] The concept of God, as described by theologians, commonly includes the attributes of omniscience (all-knowing), omnipotence (all-powerful), omnipresence (all-present), and as having an eternal and necessary existence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God
Prismatic567 wrote:Simple =
- Easily understood or done; presenting no difficulty.
- Plain, basic, or uncomplicated in form, nature, or design; without much decoration or ornamentation.
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/simple
Other than your argument P3, the default is God as understood with the conventional properties assigned to God, God is not a simple being.In monotheistic thought, God is conceived of as the supreme being, creator deity, and principal object of faith.[3] The concept of God, as described by theologians, commonly includes the attributes of omniscience (all-knowing), omnipotence (all-powerful), omnipresence (all-present), and as having an eternal and necessary existence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God
God is also known as the Absolute.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_(philosophy)
Since God is Absolute, i.e. totally unconditional, God cannot be conditioned by time or any other conditions/variables. Thus your P1 and P2.
However I believe your conclusion is not complete,
Your conclusion should be;
God is impossible to be subjected to time.
Prismatic567 wrote:Your argument would be better presented via this syllogism'P1 Absolute [theistic] meant totally unconditioned of any variable [e.g. time]
P2 God is the Absolute
C1 Therefore God is unconditioned by time.
It is impossible for God to be conditioned by time.
Prismatic567 wrote:There is nothing significant with the above.
What is significant is this point;
Is God a possibility to exists as real?
I have argued the point here
God is an Impossibilty to be real
viewtopic.php?f=5&t=193474&hilit=god+impossibility#p2683202
Are complicated things necessarily subject to time? Are there simple things that are not? Simple in what way.bahman wrote:1) God has to be simple otherwise He is subjected to time
Why can't God evolve? Change over time, that is.2) This, being subjected to time, is impossible though
Why can't God be simple? Are you saying that because people say God is different things, God can't be simple? Could't some of the definitions be wrong? Or couldn't being loving lead to just actions and attitudes. Is there a particular God you are saying is impossible`? Some versions of God are not just.3) God cannot be simple (God is love, God is Justice, etc.)
Possibly if one was working from a specific defintion of God.4) From (1), (2) and (3) we deduce that God is impossible
Well, first there's the possibility that Loving and being just are facets of the same simple attitude.First, God is the following things: God is Love, God is Justice, etc. Love however is different from Justice therefore God cannot be simple. This justifies premise (3). This can be only resolved if God is subjected to time, sometimes Love, sometimes Justice, etc. So premise (1) is justified.
Why would God have to wait?Second, God cannot be subjected to time since God has to either wait eternity to create the universe or He comes into existence at a given point.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:bahman wrote:1) God has to be simple otherwise He is subjected to time
Are complicated things necessarily subject to time?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Are there simple things that are not? Simple in what way.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:2)
This, being subjected to time, is impossible though
Why can't God evolve? Change over time, that is.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:3) God cannot be simple (God is love, God is Justice, etc.)
Why can't God be simple?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Are you saying that because people say God is different things, God can't be simple?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Could't some of the definitions be wrong?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Or couldn't being loving lead to just actions and attitudes. Is there a particular God you are saying is impossible`? Some versions of God are not just.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:4) From (1), (2) and (3) we deduce that God is impossible
Possibly if one was working from a specific defintion of God.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:First, God is the following things: God is Love, God is Justice, etc. Love however is different from Justice therefore God cannot be simple. This justifies premise (3). This can be only resolved if God is subjected to time, sometimes Love, sometimes Justice, etc. So premise (1) is justified.
Well, first there's the possibility that Loving and being just are facets of the same simple attitude.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Second, God cannot be subjected to time since God has to either wait eternity to create the universe or He comes into existence at a given point.
Why would God have to wait?
bahman wrote:Prismatic567 wrote:Simple =
- Easily understood or done; presenting no difficulty.
- Plain, basic, or uncomplicated in form, nature, or design; without much decoration or ornamentation.
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/simple
Other than your argument P3, the default is God as understood with the conventional properties assigned to God, God is not a simple being.In monotheistic thought, God is conceived of as the supreme being, creator deity, and principal object of faith.[3] The concept of God, as described by theologians, commonly includes the attributes of omniscience (all-knowing), omnipotence (all-powerful), omnipresence (all-present), and as having an eternal and necessary existence.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/God
God is also known as the Absolute.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_(philosophy)
Since God is Absolute, i.e. totally unconditional, God cannot be conditioned by time or any other conditions/variables. Thus your P1 and P2.
However I believe your conclusion is not complete,
Your conclusion should be;
God is impossible to be subjected to time.
No, premise (1) requires that God to be subject to time because He cannot be simple. He cannot be simple because He has to be love and Justice.Prismatic567 wrote:Your argument would be better presented via this syllogism'P1 Absolute [theistic] meant totally unconditioned of any variable [e.g. time]
P2 God is the Absolute
C1 Therefore God is unconditioned by time.
It is impossible for God to be conditioned by time.
You are basically trying to justify premise (2). I however argue in favor of premise (2).
Prismatic567 wrote:My point is why beat around the bush with God is love, justice, thus not simple, thus not subjected to time.
To state God is love, justice is unconvincing when there is so much evil happening in God's presence, thus you are limited by the Problem of Evil Argument.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_evil
I suggested it would be better for you to argue from the point is God is Absolute, omnipresent, omniscience, omnipotent, omni-timelessness, omni-whatever as in the syllogism I presented above.
Whilst what I suggested for you is a neater, better argument than your OP's, it will not go far against my own argument;
God is an impossibility to be real, linked above.
bahman wrote:Prismatic567 wrote:My point is why beat around the bush with God is love, justice, thus not simple, thus not subjected to time.
To state God is love, justice is unconvincing when there is so much evil happening in God's presence, thus you are limited by the Problem of Evil Argument.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_evil
I suggested it would be better for you to argue from the point is God is Absolute, omnipresent, omniscience, omnipotent, omni-timelessness, omni-whatever as in the syllogism I presented above.
Whilst what I suggested for you is a neater, better argument than your OP's, it will not go far against my own argument;
God is an impossibility to be real, linked above.
I understand your point. You showed that God cannot be subject to time.
To show that God is an impossibility I need to show that God is subjected to time too. This leads to a contradiction, therefore God becomes an impossibility.
I don't know another way to show that God is subjected to time.
Prismatic567 wrote:bahman wrote:Prismatic567 wrote:My point is why beat around the bush with God is love, justice, thus not simple, thus not subjected to time.
To state God is love, justice is unconvincing when there is so much evil happening in God's presence, thus you are limited by the Problem of Evil Argument.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_evil
I suggested it would be better for you to argue from the point is God is Absolute, omnipresent, omniscience, omnipotent, omni-timelessness, omni-whatever as in the syllogism I presented above.
Whilst what I suggested for you is a neater, better argument than your OP's, it will not go far against my own argument;
God is an impossibility to be real, linked above.
I understand your point. You showed that God cannot be subject to time.
To show that God is an impossibility I need to show that God is subjected to time too. This leads to a contradiction, therefore God becomes an impossibility.
I don't know another way to show that God is subjected to time.
I don't think your argument works.
You cannot simply conclude 'God is an impossibility' because "you" cannot show God is subjected to time.
In any case, you did not state 'God is an impossibility' in what sense?
Note God is a possibility in thought only, i.e. anyone can think 'God exists' which can affect them psychologically.
Islamic extremists think God exists, delivers holy texts that command them to kill non-believers to gain favor to enter heaven with eternal life and access to virgins. Other theists are affected psychologically merely based on thinking and believing God exists based on faith and without proofs.
So you must state the specific sense where God is an impossibility or possibility.
Note I have argued;1. God is possible within thoughts only.
2. God is an impossible in the logical sense, God can only be possible within pseudo-rational thoughts.
3. God is an impossibility to be in the real sense, e.g. within Science and empirical-rational perspective.
I don't think there are other perspectives to postulate God beside the above? Do you have any?
Nb: Definitely God cannot be impossible because you cannot justify God exists within time.
bahman wrote:Prismatic567 wrote:bahman wrote: I understand your point. You showed that God cannot be subject to time.
To show that God is an impossibility I need to show that God is subjected to time too. This leads to a contradiction, therefore God becomes an impossibility.
I don't know another way to show that God is subjected to time.
I don't think your argument works.
You cannot simply conclude 'God is an impossibility' because "you" cannot show God is subjected to time.
In any case, you did not state 'God is an impossibility' in what sense?
Note God is a possibility in thought only, i.e. anyone can think 'God exists' which can affect them psychologically.
Islamic extremists think God exists, delivers holy texts that command them to kill non-believers to gain favor to enter heaven with eternal life and access to virgins. Other theists are affected psychologically merely based on thinking and believing God exists based on faith and without proofs.
So you must state the specific sense where God is an impossibility or possibility.
Note I have argued;1. God is possible within thoughts only.
2. God is an impossible in the logical sense, God can only be possible within pseudo-rational thoughts.
3. God is an impossibility to be in the real sense, e.g. within Science and empirical-rational perspective.
I don't think there are other perspectives to postulate God beside the above? Do you have any?
Nb: Definitely God cannot be impossible because you cannot justify God exists within time.
I can show that God is an impossibility if He has to be subjected to time and cannot be subject to time at the same time.
Prismatic567 wrote:bahman wrote:Prismatic567 wrote:I don't think your argument works.
You cannot simply conclude 'God is an impossibility' because "you" cannot show God is subjected to time.
In any case, you did not state 'God is an impossibility' in what sense?
Note God is a possibility in thought only, i.e. anyone can think 'God exists' which can affect them psychologically.
Islamic extremists think God exists, delivers holy texts that command them to kill non-believers to gain favor to enter heaven with eternal life and access to virgins. Other theists are affected psychologically merely based on thinking and believing God exists based on faith and without proofs.
So you must state the specific sense where God is an impossibility or possibility.
Note I have argued;1. God is possible within thoughts only.
2. God is an impossible in the logical sense, God can only be possible within pseudo-rational thoughts.
3. God is an impossibility to be in the real sense, e.g. within Science and empirical-rational perspective.
I don't think there are other perspectives to postulate God beside the above? Do you have any?
Nb: Definitely God cannot be impossible because you cannot justify God exists within time.
I can show that God is an impossibility if He has to be subjected to time and cannot be subject to time at the same time.
Isn't this p and not-p an obvious contradiction, thus an impossibility, i.e.
IF a contradition, obviously an impossibility.
The most effective argument is;
God is an impossibility to be real.
When it is rationalized philosophically God is impossible to be real, then any question of 'God exists as real' is moot, i.e. a non-starter.
Thus the only avenue for God to exists is only in thought [mind] and this is driven by a psychological impulses originating from an existential crisis.
This is why non-theistic Buddhism [and other non-theistic secular approaches] focuses on the mind and psychological to deal directly with the specific existential crisis and side-step the never-ending, unresolvable, & certain-potentially-evil-laden issue of God exists.
bahman wrote:Prismatic567 wrote:bahman wrote:I can show that God is an impossibility if He has to be subjected to time and cannot be subject to time at the same time.
Isn't this p and not-p an obvious contradiction, thus an impossibility, i.e.
IF a contradition, obviously an impossibility.
The most effective argument is;
God is an impossibility to be real.
When it is rationalized philosophically God is impossible to be real, then any question of 'God exists as real' is moot, i.e. a non-starter.
Thus the only avenue for God to exists is only in thought [mind] and this is driven by a psychological impulses originating from an existential crisis.
This is why non-theistic Buddhism [and other non-theistic secular approaches] focuses on the mind and psychological to deal directly with the specific existential crisis and side-step the never-ending, unresolvable, & certain-potentially-evil-laden issue of God exists.
Yes, the argument is about showing that God is an impossibility to be real.
Exuberant Teleportation wrote:Figuring out why God is here is one of those great fissures into the unknown books and outlines of an invisible existence. We have yet to penetrate or unravel why such intelligence exited its old dream trance oblivion, and took over our worldly precipice. Does ultimate control cheapen the imagination? It could, because just having hands over the world may make fiction too weak of a force. If we just go to books, and believe that's real, does that make it more influential than if you know too much about what's possible and impossible like God does? And could we even handle knowing everything for that matter? Such ventures may be too extraordinary to capture.
felix dakat wrote:The OP proposition strikes me as literal nonsense of the absolutist variety. God is defined to the satisfaction of the definer who then concludes that his own chosen definition is an impossibility.
felix dakat wrote:Wouldn't intellectual humility rather lead one to consider the possibility that one's definition is in error?
felix dakat wrote:I'm using the term "nonsense" literally. Why not ask the question: Is there a possible experience which would justify believing in God?
felix dakat wrote: From the standpoint of empiricism one could then estimate the probability of such experience. But I don't see how one can claim with certitude that such experience is impossible.
bahman wrote:Which definition is wrong? What is your definition of God?
bahman wrote: Experience? Any supernatural evil being can claim that s/he is God. What is the truth?
If our sense of what is a paradox holds at all levels and all possibilities. Once we would have said that being a wave or a particle were mutually exclusive states of being. That something could not both act as a wave and as a particle at the same time. Deduction eliminated this possibility. Yet, now it seems to be the case.bahman wrote: I can show that God is an impossibility if He has to be subjected to time and cannot be subject to time at the same time.
felix dakat wrote:bahman wrote:Which definition is wrong? What is your definition of God?
As I stated above, I am going by the OP. There I understand you to define God in terms of simplicity and non-subjection to time.
felix dakat wrote:bahman wrote:Experience? Any supernatural evil being can claim that s/he is God. What is the truth?
And how do you KNOW with certitude that what you experience is NOT God?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:bahman wrote: I can show that God is an impossibility if He has to be subjected to time and cannot be subject to time at the same time.
If our sense of what is a paradox holds at all levels and all possibilities. Once we would have said that being a wave or a particle were mutually exclusive states of being. That something could not both act as a wave and as a particle at the same time. Deduction eliminated this possibility. Yet, now it seems to be the case.
Particles in superposition both exist and do not exist. They sort of exist in potential. Again, deduction might have said this was not possible, but now it is pretty much accepted in physics models.
Our deductions are always dependent on our metaphysics. What seems obvious may not be.
bahman wrote:felix dakat wrote:bahman wrote:Which definition is wrong? What is your definition of God?
As I stated above, I am going by the OP. There I understand you to define God in terms of simplicity and non-subjection to time.
God is defined as love and justice too. This make this is against simplicity of God unless you show that love and justice are similar.felix dakat wrote:bahman wrote:Experience? Any supernatural evil being can claim that s/he is God. What is the truth?
And how do you KNOW with certitude that what you experience is NOT God?
I asked "what is the truth?".
felix dakat wrote:bahman wrote:felix dakat wrote:As I stated above, I am going by the OP. There I understand you to define God in terms of simplicity and non-subjection to time.
God is defined as love and justice too. This is against simplicity of God unless you show that love and justice are similar.felix dakat wrote:And how do you KNOW with certitude that what you experience is NOT God?
I asked "what is the truth?".
If every element in the universe came from the singularity of the big bang, why can't Love & Justice come from the simplicity that is God?
felix dakat wrote:Alternatively, apart from the fact that the simplicity of God is part of the traditional orthodox definition, why must God be simple?
felix dakat wrote:On your question, "what is the truth?", from the probability that we don't know the answer with certitude, it doesn't follow that there isn't one or that such cannot be experienced.
Then nothing is simple. The word has no meaning.bahman wrote:Karpel Tunnel wrote:bahman wrote: I can show that God is an impossibility if He has to be subjected to time and cannot be subject to time at the same time.
If our sense of what is a paradox holds at all levels and all possibilities. Once we would have said that being a wave or a particle were mutually exclusive states of being. That something could not both act as a wave and as a particle at the same time. Deduction eliminated this possibility. Yet, now it seems to be the case.
Particles in superposition both exist and do not exist. They sort of exist in potential. Again, deduction might have said this was not possible, but now it is pretty much accepted in physics models.
Our deductions are always dependent on our metaphysics. What seems obvious may not be.
I don't think that we could call a quantum particle as simple.
Or perhaps some complicted things do not move towards more complexity or simplicity. CAn you demonstrate that this must be the case.bahman wrote: Yes. Complicated things either move toward more complexity or simplicity depending on the mode of things.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:2)
This, being subjected to time, is impossible though
Why can't God evolve? Change over time, that is.
Sure, knowing more. The Abrahamic religions have God as the perfect unevolving something. Perhaps they are wrong. Perhaps God evolves.Evolve toward what? Knowing more? That is the attribute of creature.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:3) God cannot be simple (God is love, God is Justice, etc.)
Why can't God be simple?
You mean because humans use inexact terms in language there could not possibly be a God where it would be useful to use those terms?Because God is love and justice. Basically these are definitions of God which are not equal because love and justice are different.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Are you saying that because people say God is different things, God can't be simple?
So if people start saying contradictory things about you will that make you no longer having existed?Yes.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Could't some of the definitions be wrong?
It seems to me all you are demonstrating is some the problems of describing things. Still, even the inexact descriptions of things can be useful, and even convey core truths.God at least is love and justice. He is also existence. There are other definitions too. A God who is love cannot be hate for example so we have to decide which one God is, good God or Evil God? Here as an example we are working with good God.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Or couldn't being loving lead to just actions and attitudes. Is there a particular God you are saying is impossible`? Some versions of God are not just.
That's true for a lot of things we know exist.There is problem if there are at least two definitions.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:First, God is the following things: God is Love, God is Justice, etc. Love however is different from Justice therefore God cannot be simple. This justifies premise (3). This can be only resolved if God is subjected to time, sometimes Love, sometimes Justice, etc. So premise (1) is justified.
Well, first there's the possibility that Loving and being just are facets of the same simple attitude.
If you are loving you want to treat those you love justly.Then please show that love and justice are facets of the same simple attitude.
Karpel Tunnel wrote:Second, God cannot be subjected to time since God has to either wait eternity to create the universe or He comes into existence at a given point.
Why would God have to wait?
Karpel Tunnel wrote:bahman wrote:Karpel Tunnel wrote:If our sense of what is a paradox holds at all levels and all possibilities. Once we would have said that being a wave or a particle were mutually exclusive states of being. That something could not both act as a wave and as a particle at the same time. Deduction eliminated this possibility. Yet, now it seems to be the case.
Particles in superposition both exist and do not exist. They sort of exist in potential. Again, deduction might have said this was not possible, but now it is pretty much accepted in physics models.
Our deductions are always dependent on our metaphysics. What seems obvious may not be.
I don't think that we could call a quantum particle as simple.
Then nothing is simple. The word has no meaning.
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