I apologize for this being in the wrong section of the board. To the mod that was kind enough to move it: thank you. :)
J'Pol, I agree with you when you say that we humans, if confronted with the undeniable existence of a god, could never understand him/her/it in full, due to our very limited knowledge, especially about the universe.Quote:
Any attempt to understand or define the intent of an omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent being, based on our limited understanding of the universe is arrogant in the extreme and ultimately doomed to failure. We cannot understand things for which we have no frame of reference, as a starting point.
However, when you say that God is an omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent being you also have no frames of reference to support your belief. You're merely speculating, just like I'm doing.
And where exactly is the arrogance of a theory such as this? :huh:
I never said I was right and everyone else was wrong, did I?
Was Einstein arrogant in trying to understand gravity, a supposed product of God's creation?
I simply took the attributes often applied to the concept of God (omniscient and omnipotent) and analyzed them in a logical way.
Sure it can all be wrong if some premises that we can't understand, come up (I have seen none yet, though).
But from a human point of view it's a logical theory that if an omniscient being, creator of all things, exists, then free will can't possibly exist.
If someone told you that they had a theory that was so complex that no one would ever understand it, wouldn't you want to hear it first even though you knew you had no chances of comprehend it?Quote:
It is like trying to explain the workings of the internal combustion engine to a tree frog. There are simply too many concepts and ideas that fall outwith our current knowledge and understanding.
Just because you or I can't understand certain things, doesn't mean that in the future someone can't get a grasp of it. If you were to go back in time to the year 2000 b.C. and told everyone that in the future, humans would set foot on the moon, they would have probably told you that such a feat is only in the reach of the gods.
Oh and by the way, I would consider myself a tree sap next to Isaac Newton or Werner Heisenberg, for example. Next to an omnipotent being (if its existence is undeniably proved), I would consider myself a grain of dust, if that much.
You got me all wrong.Quote:
Let me cut through this.
IF you believe in an all knowing Being (God, Spirit of the Universe or Creative Intelligence, etc.)
God has infinite knowledge.
Humans have finite knowledge.
Of course God knows what you're going to do. No matter how many machinations you connive.
That's why God knows. Even though we have free will. Simple really.
First of all, I'm agnostic and I'm not trying to come up with machinations to prove that God exists or not, or that he knows what I'm doing or not.
What I was saying was that in a logical point of view, the existence of an omniscient being isn't compatible with the existence of free will.
Read my first posts again and you will understand.