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FFT: Seversky and the IS-OUGHT gap

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In the ongoing AJ vs ID discussion thread, major tangential debates have developed. One of these is on the IS-OUGHT gap, and it is worth headlining due to its pivotal worldviews importance (and yes, this is a philosophy issue). Let us start with Seversky, highlighting his key contention — which is commonly asserted:

Sev, 261: >>Origenes @ 258

The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

You cannot logically derive “ought” from “is”. No one can, not even God. So, if our morality is God-given, how did He – or, indeed, any other being – derive it? Did He toss a coin?>>

Origines, 262 (to EA but relevant): >>Eric Anderson @259

Thank you for pointing out the typical materialistic response wrt morality.

EA: However, the squirming can eventually follow the direction it does for the rest of the materialist creation story: namely, at some point Characteristic X didn’t exist, and then at some later point Characteristic X “evolved.”

The majority of materialists fails to understand that materialism can only take us to the illusion of effective moral laws. Suppose that by ‘Characteristic X’ is meant organismal behavior which is consistent with the moral law “thou shall not steal”. Now, in a purely material universe, all sorts of physical stuff can contribute to X, but X can never be caused by the moral law “thou shall not steal”. The consistency with a moral law is happenstantial and not an intended result. There cannot be a moral law who is telling atoms how to behave. In a materialistic world the moral law “though shall not steal” has no power to reach down in the brain and rearrange neuronal behavior so as to comply with that moral law.

Illusion.

Given materialism, it can only be the case that it is as if a moral law is being respected. So, no, naturalism cannot get us to morality. It can only get us to the illusion of morality. It can result in behavior which, incidentally, is consistent with a moral law. But noticing this consistency is nothing more than the occasional observation of temporal happenstantial synchronicity between two totally unrelated things.>>

KF, 263: >>Seversky, if you have been keeping track that is not what is at stake. The issue is, we are patently inescapably morally governed, as for instance you implied by trying to correct and by expecting us to have a sense of duty to the truth and the right. Either that speaks truly or mindedness collapses into grand delusion. As, if such is a delusional perception in an actually utterly amoral world then delusion is at the heart of attempts to reason and be responsible — as Rosenberg implies but tries to put a rosy picture on. Absurd. So, we need to ask, what sort of world must we be in for such moral government not to be rooted in grand delusion. This points to world-roots that cannot be infinite regress or a chicken-egg loop. Finitely remote, necessary being root. As, were there ever utter non-being (which can have no causal powers) such would forever obtain. The premise that, on pain of grand delusion and absurdity, we are responsibly and rationally significantly free and morally governed, self-moved creatures then leads to the world root being a necessary being that is at the same time inextricably the root of moral government. Where, if we are not self-moved initiating causal agents, we have no true freedom to draw a LOGICAL, meaningful inference from grounds and/or evidence to the consequent or a warranted conclusion, we would be trapped in a delusion of rationality while actually being the GIGO-limited playthings of our computational substrates and their blind, mechanically driven and/or stochastic cause effect chains. We must be free and self-moved to be rational or responsible. Is and ought are not IS–> OUGHT, but instead that they are inherently inextricably entangled and utterly fused at the world-root. There is one serious candidate (if you doubt, kindly provide a coherent alternative: _____ ) i.e. the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being, worthy of loyalty and the reasonable, responsible service of doing the good in accord with our evident nature.>>

The immediate context for this is also well worth excerpting as a part of the spark for onward discussion:

HP, 256: >>The [subjective moralists] I have read . . .  don’t say that “moral values and obligations are totally subjective.”, they claim that the individual values are subjective. A small distinction I realize, but an important one. And, I apologize in advance for not phrasing this as well as I would like.

My own personal belief is that our system of morality is a combination of objective and subjective. The most obvious objective aspect of our morality system is that the existance of this system appears to be universal amongst humans. Even psychopaths and sociopaths have a morality system. They just happen to be very different than that of the majority of the population. Of the other values (not killing, lying, stealing…) some may be objective and others subjective. Frankly, I don’t know. And I don’t really care. But the one thing that makes logical sense is that if there are objective morals, they are not independent of subjectivity. They are either strengthened by our experiences or they are weakened. Thus explaining the variations that we see in their application amongst different cultures.>>

Origines, 258:>>

hammaspeikko: The ones I have read, which I admit are limited, are more nuanced than that. They don’t say that “moral values and obligations are totally subjective.”, they claim that the individual values are subjective. A small distinction I realize, but an important one.

I have never heard about such a moral system. Individual values are subjective and non-individual values are not? Can you provide some more info?
The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

Here is atheistic philosopher Alex Rosenberg:

Scientism can’t avoid nihilism. We need to make the best of it….

First, nihilism can’t condemn Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot, or those who fomented the Armenian genocide or the Rwandan one. If there is no such thing as “morally forbidden,” then what Mohamed Atta did on September 11, 2001, was not morally forbidden. Of course, it was not permitted either. But still, don’t we want to have grounds to condemn these monsters? Nihilism seems to cut that ground out from under us. …

To avoid these outcomes, people have been searching for scientifically respectable justification of morality for least a century and a half. The trouble is that over the same 150 years or so, the reasons for nihilism have continued to mount. Both the failure to find an ethics that everyone can agree on and the scientific explanation of the origin and persistence of moral norms have made nihilism more and more plausible while remaining just as unappetizing.

[A. Rosenberg, ‘The Atheist’s Guide To Reality’, ch. 5]>>

EA, 259: >>Origenes:

The matter seems very simple to me: because fermions and bosons are completely indifferent about morality, it is not possible to ground morality for atheists/materialists.

I think your point is well made, and should be sufficient to make any materialist squirm.

However, the squirming can eventually follow the direction it does for the rest of the materialist creation story: namely, at some point Characteristic X didn’t exist, and then at some later point Characteristic X “evolved.”

This may not seem very intellectually satisfactory to the objective observer, but the materialist is perfectly happy to argue that morality evolved as a result of [insert made-up reason here]. It isn’t fundamentally different than any other system or characteristic evolving. No details. No particular reason or direction. It just did.

So while I agree with your general point, and Rosenberg’s frank admission, the entire issue becomes lost on the committed materialist. After all, the entire view of history and creation and all that this entails, is just — as you aptly noted — nothing more than a long accidental sequence of particles bumping into each other.

And those particles, so the thinking does, don’t have to ground anything. Not design, not functional complexity, not information. Nothing. Just wait long enough for the particles to bump into each other enough times, and — Ta Da! — here we are. Whether we are talking about molecular machines or morality, it is all the same in the materialist creation story.

Remember, this is all right in line with the Great Evolutionary Explanation for all things:

Stuff Happens.

It is really no more substantive than that.>>

So, how then do we come to be morally governed, and what does this imply about us and the world? END

Comments
Origenes, I believe that whatever you, I or anybody else for this matter could say here is just our opinion based on our interpretation of what we know. How we receive that knowledge is another issue that requires a separate discussion. The ultimate reality does not change by our perception of it. The ultimate reality is not what we want it to be, or how we understand it, or how someone said it is. It is simply what it is. Nothing more, nothing less. Just that. However, if we desire to understand the ultimate reality, I believe we must start from being humble about our limited capacity to understand it. Thus we can enjoy the long and winding road that leads to more knowledge about the ultimate reality. We must test everything and hold only what is good. But that necessary requirement raises the question: what is good? However, such a fundamental question demands an absolute standard for discernment. What is that standard? Where is it? How can we reach it? How can we understand it? I believe these discussions here, however interesting they might be, don't lead anywhere unless the participants are really interested in knowing the truth --humbly admitting their limited knowledge while contemplating in awe the marvelous universe and specially our own minds. I wrote a few comments addressed to you but apparently --at least according to what I read in your comment @245-- we still don't understand each other, hence the question "do we really want to understand?" seems to come to mind, doesn't it? It's not my intention to persuade or convince anybody here about anything, because I firmly believe that the ultimate source of wisdom and knowledge is God. But I would like to understand your thinking at least with respect to the discussed topics. So far I haven't been able to reach that point regarding your ideas. Also I've noticed that you have not understood my points either. Perhaps various issues affect our mutual understanding, assuming that we both meet the above listed necessary conditions for a productive discussion. On my side, one thing that hinders the understanding is that my reading comprehension is rather poor. That's why I ask more simple questions than most folks here do. Whoever wants to explain something to me has to do it in a very clear way that is extremely easy to understand and leaves no room for ambiguities or misinterpretations. Otherwise, I'll have to ask more questions to clarify what I read. Another issue that may affect the smooth flow of our attempted discussion is that my written communication skills are practically nonexistent (my verbal communication is even worse, but fortunately our chatting here is all written). Basically, I don't know how to present ideas in a clear and easy to understand format. Hence my co-discussants should bear with me patiently, making an extra effort to see my points, and in many cases have to ask me additional questions about what I'm trying to say. I don't mind answering questions. In some cases I may have to say "I don't know", which is a valid answer too. I've been sneaking out of the current project I'm working on in order to read and write comments here, mostly as a learning experience. This "leisure" period might be coming to an end soon. I'm about to transition to another stage of the project that could demand much more dedication and time. The gathering of biology papers for different scenarios may slow down substantially in the near future, so that I can spend more time working on other parts of the project.Dionisio
May 10, 2017
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Origenes
Now you cannot have it both ways. You cannot have a God who ‘somehow’/’actually’ performs every action in the world and a human being who is responsible for his ‘own’ actions.
I think these are interesting questions. Rather than giving any dogmatic answer, I'd like to tease this out a bit more using an analogy with which I am very familiar. Imagine a character in a video game. Suppose that I, personally, am the creator of the console the game runs on, have provided the electricity for that console, have crafted all the content in the video game, including the character, and have coded the game in its entirety. There is nothing that the character can do that is not entirely dependent upon me. The character cannot move apart from what I have provided. It cannot render apart from what I have provided. It cannot even exist apart from what I have provided and continue to provide. None of the above is diminished by me allowing someone to pick up a controller and drive the character around. I suppose you could argue that, in doing so, I was relinquishing some degree of control, but what if I also had the ability to alter any bit of hardware, content, programming, access to electricity, or any number of other factors in real time (or better than real time because I had perfect foreknowledge). Now is my power diminished in any way by the fact that someone else is holding a controller?Phinehas
May 10, 2017
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K, you don't give me straight answers and talk about a "good creator God" "worthy of loyalty" as if that contradicts my position. Let me lay it out one more time: you speak of humans as free self-moved rational responsible beings. In my view, this implies that there exists responsibility and accessory power, that belongs uniquely to humans — not to anything or anyone else; God included. What we have here is pure individual responsibility for the use of individual power. Now you cannot have it both ways. You cannot have a God who 'somehow'/'actually' performs every action in the world and a human being who is responsible for his 'own' actions. That is incoherent. Now you refuse to provide clarity on this point, and, to be frank, that's why this discussion is getting rather frustrating. I think I have made it perfectly clear what I am arguing against. So maybe now the time has come for you to be clear also. What is your claim? Let me ask again: do you agree with wiki's 6th option:
Every action performed in the world is ‘actually’ being performed by the deity, either due to omni-immanence, or because all actions must be ‘supported’ or ‘permitted’ by the deity.
Do you defenfd the claim that "God holds all the power there is", put differently, do you defend the claim that "God holds a monopoly on all the power there is"? Because if you do, then this has not been clear to me and others.
HeKS #254: I don’t think I know anybody who believes God is omnipotent in that particular sense.
Origenes
May 10, 2017
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O, the conceptual issue is right there before you. I used a case study to highlight it. KFkairosfocus
May 10, 2017
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KairosFocus @216
... try to think in terms of God has maximal possible power to love and to be creative, L&C.
From this Wiki article 6 interpretations of ‘omnipotence’:
1. A deity is able to do anything that it chooses to do. 2. A deity is able to do anything that is in accord with its own nature (thus, for instance, if it is a logical consequence of a deity's nature that what it speaks is truth, then it is not able to lie). 3. Hold that it is part of a deity's nature to be consistent and that it would be inconsistent for said deity to go against its own laws unless there was a reason to do so. 4. A deity can bring about any state of affairs which is logically possible for anyone to bring about in that situation. 5. A deity is able to do anything that corresponds with its omniscience and therefore with its worldplan. 6. Every action performed in the world is 'actually' being performed by the deity, either due to omni-immanence, or because all actions must be 'supported' or 'permitted' by the deity.
I see nothing wrong with 1, 2 and 3. Option 4 I have to reject, because ‘anyone’ could be a monster. Option 5 seems debatable, because ‘anything’ seems to include behavior that goes against His nature. And, finally, here in this thread, I am arguing against 6. Option 6 seems to be very close to “God holds all the power there is”. For clarity, do you support 6? If not, why not.
KF: How does the existence of M DIMINISH God’s power L&C?
That’s not the focal point of my claim. My claim is simply that at some point M holds power that God (by choice) does not. My claim is that M holds responsibility that God does not. It follows that God does not hold all power/responsibility there is. As a side-issue we can argue about whether there is a sum zero game involved. I think there is a case to be made that God at some point transfers responsibility (e.g. wrt the safety of a child) to human parents. So we enter a situation where God does not have a certain responsibility, which he did have before — sum zero. But again that’s not my main argument. *editedOrigenes
May 10, 2017
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F/N: Someone above raised a query about distinct world roots. To respond, I think we need to look at three core principles:
1: The power and breadth of the possible worlds (PW) concept: in effect a sufficient description of a coherent way a world can be. This takes in possible worlds as a unified, utterly broad whole, a unity amidst I imagine a potentially infinite diversity. 2: The ontology of being and non-being, especially, the point that a necessary being would be framework-level to any possible world. (So the issue is, is a serious candidate NB impossible? If not, actual and framework to any PW. Try to think of a PW without distinct identity, or, equivalently, twoness, based on A and ~A.) 3: The issue of distinct identity, thus two-ness and its corollary, the identity of indiscernibles. (Where there may be two or more ways to describe [facets of] the same essential entity.)
Given us in our actual world, we have seen why the NB at root of our world must be able to be an IS that inherently grounds OUGHT. This has led to just one serious candidate: the inherently good creator God, a necessary and maximally great being. One, worthy of loyalty and the reasonable, responsible service of doing the good in accord with our evident nature. Now, a distinct world root would have to be distinguishable on one or more of the core characteristics cited: inherently good, world-level creator, necessary being, maximally great. No being lacking any of these characteristics would be the God of ethical theism. And, a being meeting those characteristics would be indiscernible from God. That is, we have two descriptions of God, not two Gods governing differing realms of possible worlds. In short, there is good reason to see the world-root of ethical theism as utterly unique. KFkairosfocus
May 9, 2017
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O, Try to think in terms of God has maximal possible power to love and to be creative, L&C. He then creates a creature, M, such that M -- to comparatively infinitesimal degree -- has power to love and be creative, l&c, which BTW, from moment to moment requires the sustaining and supportive action of God; without which l&c cannot be exercised -- think of "in him we live and move and have our being, as some of your poets have said" and "upholding all things by his word of power," or "he made all things, and without him was not anything made that was made," etc. How does the existence of M DIMINISH God's power L&C? It cannot, God does not have to cut off and alienate or consume or degrade and discard a slice of L&C to create M. Indeed, for us as cases M, the use of power l&c typically INCREASES our capability l&c, i.e. we have INCREASING returns to scale because of learning and growth effects. This is not a zero sum game but a growing sum game* if we can put it that way, hence a world with cases M where on the whole a material proportion M-p will appropriately use l&c will end up INCREASING the net goodness of the world . . . a point more or less noted by Plantinga in his free will defense. This also speaks to a case where one manifestation of l&c is reproductive, so we see l&c increasing towards a potential infinity! As in, the meek shall inherit the earth. (Note, also, component l entails a power of rational, responsible choice, and power c implies the like power.) KF _________ * The whole at end of stage k_e is greater than the sum of the parts going in at the start of the stage, k_o. I think growth can be internal to an agent and synergistic among agents and/or across a system. Knowledge, a known creative product, is a commonplace entity which behaves like that. Likewise, for innovation, indeed we can conceive of a critical mass, positive runaway/ avalanche effect that grows without limit once a key threshold is passed. (In the Christian Faith, that is the point of the gospel event, it is a critical threshold sparking a tide in history that is inexorably rising never mind waves of advance and retreat from time to time.)kairosfocus
May 9, 2017
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Phinehas: In my view God having a “monopoly” on power is nonsensical. That would be like claiming he had a monopoly on love. Love is not a commodity. It is not a zero sum game. When I love my wife it is not as though I somehow lost love in the process.
I have emphasized the aspect of responsibility transfer and, perhaps, in effect, argued in favor of a zero sum game effect. That still seems correct to me. I think your claim about its absence is mistaken. Perhaps it helps to view the transfer of power in conjunction with the transfer of responsibility. God transfers a certain responsibility/power to us wrt other people and the world; e.g. the safety of our children. This may very well not be an irrevocable decision by Him, but, within a certain time frame and context, there is a zero sum game (transfer) in place. As I have argued before, we cannot blame God for our actions and their consequences; not God is responsible, we are — zero sum.Origenes
May 9, 2017
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Thanks HekS! Same here. :)Phinehas
May 9, 2017
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to HeKS at 252: Yes, as I said I confused the issue by bringing up infinite in respect to numbers, when the discussion is about the more general meaning of infinite as "without limit". Carry on.jdk
May 9, 2017
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Phinehas, Agreed. Nice to "see" you, by the way.HeKS
May 9, 2017
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HeKS @246: Interesting illustrative examples. Thanks. Some of our friends here don't seem to see it that clearly though. I'm trying to understand Origenes' point, but still can't. That's why I ask questions. He's trying to explain it to me, but I'm not a fast reader. My reading comprehension level is rather low. I appreciate his effort to present his position. I'm kind of slow in discussions, hence discussants must bear with me patiently. :)Dionisio
May 9, 2017
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Origenes:
In my view God is very powerful, but not omnipotent in the sense of a monopoly on all the power there is.
In my view God having a "monopoly" on power is nonsensical. That would be like claiming he had a monopoly on love. Love is not a commodity. It is not a zero sum game. When I love my wife it is not as though I somehow lost love in the process. For me and how I understand things, my issue isn't with your view on how much of the commodity of power God does or does not hold, but rather on how you view power as a commodity in the first place. If power is not a commodity, then your argument against God's "monopoly" on it has no leg to stand on.Phinehas
May 9, 2017
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Origenes #253
In my view God is very powerful, but not omnipotent in the sense of a monopoly on all the power there is.
I don't think I know anybody who believes God is omnipotent in that particular sense.
The same with “omniscience”. Surely God knows an awful lot, but this does not include a complete description of all the quantum interactions in the star ‘RW Cep’. In my view God is a person and some things capture his interest and other things not so much.
There are different views on the way in which God is omniscient. For example, some hold to the view that God has absolute omniscience, meaning that he always has all knowledge of all things at all times, including all future events. Others hold to the view that God has inherent omniscience, meaning that he has the capacity to know all things, including future events, but that he does not fully express this capacity, partly to preserve the dignity of humans and to ensure that when he makes offers to humans based on their future actions he can do so sincerely. I fall more into this latter camp than the former. Indeed, on all those 'omni' characteristics I hold mainly to a view of infinite capacity/potentiality rather than one of constant infinite expression.HeKS
May 9, 2017
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In my view God is very powerful, but not omnipotent in the sense of a monopoly on all the power there is. The same with “omniscience”. Surely God knows an awful lot, but this does not include a complete description of all the quantum interactions in the star ‘RW Cep’. In my view God is a person and some things capture his interest and other things not so much.Origenes
May 9, 2017
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Origenes and jdk, A distinction must be made between an infinite set of things and infinite potentiality The former, being a completed infinity, is not possible. The latter, being only a potential infinite, is possible. When talking about God's omnipotence we're talking about his infinite capacity and potentiality for producing/exerting power, not his completion of the act (whether past, present or future) of producing/exerting "all" of the infinite power, or even of possessing it, like it is some commodity in limited supply. Who (other than Origenes) has defined omnipotence as "having all of the power there is" or defended that as the proper formulation of the concept? Perhaps I've missed it somewhere but I haven't seen anybody else arguing for the meaning.HeKS
May 9, 2017
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I don’t have all the numbers anymore
You could never have all the numbers. Introducing infinity destroys the concept of 'all'. In fact, numbers themselves lose the meaning they had. Andrewasauber
May 9, 2017
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Hmm. I'm sorry if I've muddied the waters, especially since I'm not very interested in the actual theological discussion, but I think Origenes is right about my statement about infinity. There are an infinite number of natural numbers. If I take away all the odd numbers, I still have an infinite number of even numbers but I don't have all the numbers anymore.jdk
May 9, 2017
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Are people really discussing population-level reproductive advantage conferred by moral values? Really? I mean seriously? A wake-up call to evolutionists...EugeneS
May 9, 2017
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HeKS: This makes sense in the same way that it would make sense to argue that if God had a really big bag of potato chips and he gave you a couple of the chips in the bag, he would no longer have those chips, because he gave them to you rather than keeping them for himself.
Very funny. You do have a way with comparisons.
HeKs: This is why I pointed out that “God is the wellspring of power, not simply its consumer and manipulator”.
Jdk: Infinity – x = infinity, for all finite x.
Let's suppose: There, mainly on the left quadrant of the multiverse, is an infinite number of potato chips. Here, in my hometown, 27 potato chips. There are no other potato chips. Question: Can someone rightly claim to hold "all the potato chips there are", if he does not hold the 27 potato chips from my hometown?Origenes
May 9, 2017
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Infinity – x = infinity, for all finite x.jdk
May 9, 2017
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Dionisio #244
If God gave you certain capabilities, how do you relate that to God losing something in that transaction? How can you explain that the fact that you have something that God gave to you implies that God does not have it?
This kind of notion follows from the issue I addressed in #212 and repeated in #238. If you view power as some kind of consumable, non-renewable commodity being apportioned in some kind of zero-sum game then it makes perfect sense that if God gives you some degree of power then he no longer has that bit of power he gave to you. This makes sense in the same way that it would make sense to argue that if God had a really big bag of potato chips and he gave you a couple of the chips in the bag, he would no longer have those chips, because he gave them to you rather than keeping them for himself. This is why I pointed out that "God is the wellspring of power, not simply its consumer and manipulator".HeKS
May 9, 2017
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Dionisio:
(4)If I hold power X then God does not hold power X
If God gave you certain capabilities, how do you relate that to God losing something in that transaction? How can you explain that the fact that you have something that God gave to you implies that God does not have it? Can you elaborate on that? Also provide an illustrative example?
What I am saying is that when I choose to fire a gun, then I am the one who is responsible. Surely God can intervene and take that power away from me. But, if He does not do that, then the use of that power is my responsibility. I use that power. God does not. In other words, God (by choice) does not hold all the power there is. Put differently, if God holds all the power there is, then there can be only one actor — assuming that to act requires power. God would de facto be alone. And if that is the case, then God is the only one responsible for everything that ever happened.Origenes
May 9, 2017
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Origenes @243:
[...] I have a certain power (or powers) to do things (eat, think, walk, talk and so forth), and that I received this power from God.
OK, so you refer to "capability" or "capacity" as "power", right? And you correctly say that God provided that to you. OK, I think I understand that part. Now please explain, how does that relate to this which you wrote @240:
If I hold power X then God does not hold power X
If God gave you certain capabilities, how do you relate that to God losing something in that transaction? How can you explain that the fact that you have something that God gave to you implies that God does not have it? Can you elaborate on that? Also provide an illustrative example? Thanks.Dionisio
May 9, 2017
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Dioniosio:
(2) God transferred power X to me.
What does that mean?
Something very simple. It means that I have a certain power (or powers) to do things (eat, think, walk, talk and so forth), and that I received this power from God.Origenes
May 9, 2017
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Origenes @240:
(2) God transferred power X to me.
What does that mean? Where did you get that concept from? Is it from a book? Are you quoting somebody else here or elsewhere? Did you get it from a science-fiction movie? Did you make that up yourself? I don't recall reading such a concept before, but my reading comprehension is rather poor, hence I could have overlooked it.Dionisio
May 9, 2017
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07:55 AM
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jdk @236:
Is there some part of your post at 208 that you would like me to reply to?
You've done it @236. Just wanted to make sure you had not missed my post @208. Thanks. Now I see that you did not miss it. I respect your beliefs. You and I were made by our Creator in Imago Dei. That alone confers us equal dignity. God loves you. It's written. Christ is the true source of real life. Please, think about this. Seriously. Sola Scriptura Sola Fide Sola Gratia Solus Christus Soli Deo GloriaDionisio
May 9, 2017
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07:48 AM
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Kairosfocus
… it is in God as world root that we live and move and have our being …
Yet, God is not alone. God is not the only actor. Not every hand that is raised is raised by God.
… all power we have can be aptly said to be “borrowed” from God …
Borrowed or not, we should take responsibility for our actions.
… even the life that is expressed in our breaths. Reality is wholly dependent on God for its origin and moment to moment existence. We depend on him, not the reverse.
Humans depend on him in many ways, yet humans —not God—created Auschwitz.
We have a privilege of responsible, rational freedom (which gives us power to love and thus have a measure of virtue), but it does not exist autonomously, independent of and outside of God as world root.
I’m fine with that, as long as one understands that one really does hold power and cannot blame God and/or others for one’s actions. - - - - - Defining "omnipotent" as "holding all the power there is" runs into a logical problem: (1) If God is omnipotent, then God holds all power. (2) God transferred power X to me. (3) I am self-moved, free, rational and responsible. God is not responsible for what I do with X. (4) If I hold power X then God does not hold power X, which means God does not hold all power. Therefor (5) God is not omnipotent.Origenes
May 9, 2017
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07:26 AM
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KF et al,
1: Omnipotence: God is the root of being for all possible worlds, and so holds maximal possible power– capability and freedom of action — in any actualisable or actualised world.
I too don't see any logical problems with an omnipotent being, under this definition. Such a being could only have powers consistent with the existence of other free agents (humans, in particular) of course. Now whether such a being would have to be unique, I'm not sure. Couldn't there be distinct maximal collections of powers, and thus two or more omnipotent beings?daveS
May 9, 2017
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07:02 AM
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Origenes #229,
BTW you are in good company, HeKS (#212) claimed that “all the power there is” necessarily points to power as an “external commodity” to God.
That's not exactly what I said. I didn't say the phrase "necessarily" points to power as an exclusively external commodity, nor was the externality my primary point. Let me provide a streamlined quote of my point:
By referring to “all the power there is” you’re treating power like [a] . . . commodity to which God has access and where the distribution of power is a zero-sum game. . . . That He grants to living beings a limited power of their own does not deplete or reduce God’s ability to exert power as though it were some consumable good in limited supply. God is the wellspring of power, not simply its consumer and manipulator.
You could remove the word "external" from what I wrote and the point would be exactly the same.HeKS
May 9, 2017
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