Omnipotent beings are self-contradictory?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of omnipotence and its implications, particularly focusing on the paradoxes that arise when considering an omnipotent being as both an irresistible force and an immovable object. Participants explore theoretical and philosophical questions related to the nature of omnipotence, logic, and existence.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that the riddle of an irresistible force meeting an immovable object illustrates a contradiction, suggesting that both cannot coexist if one exists.
  • Others question whether omnipotence requires the ability to violate logic, citing examples like the creation of a rock so heavy that even an omnipotent being cannot lift it.
  • A few participants argue that an omnipotent being could possess the properties of both an immovable object and an irresistible force, but this leads to contradictions that challenge the concept of omnipotence.
  • Some express the view that if an omnipotent being cannot exist due to inherent contradictions, then it cannot perform any actions, including the act of existing.
  • There are discussions about the implications of assigning physical properties to an omnipotent being, with some suggesting that such properties may not apply to a being that transcends physical existence.
  • One participant introduces a programming analogy to illustrate the sequence of existence and power, suggesting that the order of properties could influence the existence of an omnipotent being.
  • Another viewpoint suggests that an omnipotent being could have the potential to do anything, but this does not mean it must always embody contradictory states simultaneously.
  • Some participants reflect on the nature of existence and the potential for an omnipotent being to exist in forms that do not conform to physical properties.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with no clear consensus on the nature of omnipotence or the implications of the discussed paradoxes. Disagreement exists regarding whether an omnipotent being can exist without contradiction and how logic interacts with the concept of omnipotence.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include unresolved definitions of omnipotence, the nature of existence, and the implications of logical contradictions. The discussion does not reach a definitive conclusion on these points.

honestrosewater
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I just read an old riddle: What happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object?
Answer: The description involves a contradiction. For an irresistible force to meet an immovable object, both must exist. But if an irresistible force exists, there exists no immovable object and vice versa.
Wouldn't an omnipotent being be both an irresistible force and an immovable object?
 
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Or more simplistic: if God can do anything, can He create a rock so heavy even He can't lift it?
 
And does omnipotence require the ability to overrule logic? Can God make a circular square? When this sort of question is asked to Believers, a common response is, "Yes He could do that, but He loves logic and wants His creation to be logical, so He voluntarily restrains Himself from doing things that violate logic."
 
honestrosewater said:
I just read an old riddle: What happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object?
Answer: The description involves a contradiction. For an irresistible force to meet an immovable object, both must exist. But if an irresistible force exists, there exists no immovable object and vice versa.

Thanks, that's helpful. Lots of ideas seem to involve contradictions like that. You know, like "what's north of the north pole?". As Jacob Bronowski said, "it's precisely the ambiguity of language that makes for rich discovery". Something like that anyway.
 
Does anyone think an omnipotent being (OB) wouldn't have the properties of being an immovable object and an irresistible force? Could it somehow avoid the contraditiction? I'm inclined to think even an OB has no power at all unless it exists. So if it's impossible for an OB to exist, it's impossible for an OB to exist, and even an OB can't do anything to change that. Does anyone disagree?
 
That makes sense to me but i would think it is a matter of which one comes first. This probably is because of my programming background but I kinda have gotten used to chewing through things in a chronological order. 1st command,2nd...So if the first ruled out the 2nd, then the 2nd wouldn't compile/exist.
------------------------------------------
Universe.ruleOutOmnipotentBeings();
OmnipotentBeings.ignoreUniverse'sRules();

--or--

OmnipotentBeings.ignoreUniverse'sRules();
Universe.ruleOutOmnipotentBeings();
-----------------------------------------

But you could probably argue about this for hours and not get anywhere.That is just my way of seeing it. Hope you understand what I wrote above...
I think that an omnipotent being could/does do whateverthehell it/she/he wants to, maybe we just can't experience it all...Or maybe it wants logic... If i was an OB I would want some type of logic for the people who worship me.
 
When an irresistable force meets an unmoveable object, you are met with a roadfork where you must choose one or the other, although both will still EXIST, just not simultaneously. Like f(x) = sqrt(x)

For SOME reason, this makes me think of Schrödinger's Cat.
 
honestrosewater said:
Does anyone think an omnipotent being (OB) wouldn't have the properties of being an immovable object and an irresistible force? Could it somehow avoid the contraditiction? I'm inclined to think even an OB has no power at all unless it exists. So if it's impossible for an OB to exist, it's impossible for an OB to exist, and even an OB can't do anything to change that. Does anyone disagree?
Wouldn't assigning these properties essentially be assigning physical properties to an omnipotent being? I would think that an OB could not exist physically because of the contradiction you mentioned. Of course, when I think of an all-powerful being, I think of the concept of God (an 'OOO' Creator in my case), and I don't envision God as having a physical form.
 
Math Is Hard said:
Wouldn't assigning these properties essentially be assigning physical properties to an omnipotent being?
I don't know, but assume it does. If an OB could exist in any form, it could exist in a physical form- otherwise it wouldn't be omnipotent. What do you think?
Icebreaker said:
although both will still EXIST, just not simultaneously.
I don't understand. If they both exist, they do exist simultaneously. Do you mean they both possibly exist? Once one of them exists, the other doesn't even possibly exist.

3mpathy said:
I think that an omnipotent being could/does do whateverthehell it/she/he wants to
Sure, once it exists. But can it exist? I don't follow the code.
 
  • #10
An omnipotent being is a being that has the potential or power to do anything. So it could be an immovable object or an irresistable force, but that doesn't entail that it always is both. An omnipotent being could take physical form and beat each person in a race, but that doesn't mean that it always is beating people in races. An omnipotent being could destroy the planet Earth, but that doesn't mean that it always is, or that it ever will, just that it can. However, the ability to do anything does not imply the ability to do something contradictory, just as omniscience, possessing all knowledge, does not imply knowing falsehoods. So if being an irresistable force and an immovable object at the same time is contradictory, then it doesn't detract from the power of an omnipotent being if he can't be both at the same time, since it just means that he can't do anything contradictory, which is obvious, because it doesn't make sense to do something that is contradictory.
 
  • #11
AKG said:
An omnipotent being is a being that has the potential or power to do anything. So it could be an immovable object or an irresistable force, but that doesn't entail that it always is both.
Oh, right. Heh.
 
  • #12
OR, the OB is an energy/consciousness gestalt wherein all knowledge, power, etc resides. If we want the immoveable object we go to it's point of existence or go to the irresitible object's point. Assuming both are continuously expanding it would be necessary to select the power point of each to determine which would survive or succeed the collision.

love&peace,
olde drunk


"heaven was created so that your clergy could charge admission"
 

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