DeletedUser8396
Guest
Going to be giving the Lit section one more try.
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First, let me ask you a question:
Before anything existed (aside from God), was God defined as singular? One? Or did God first have to define numeric logic before being considered singular?
Obviously the former, for if it is the latter: how many Gods were there before the creation of numeric logic? If you say more than one, then God cannot be eternally singular as He claims. If singular, then numeric logic must exist. If undescribed, then He cannot be eternally consistent in being the only God (as only implies and necessitates one).
So, numbers precede or run alongside God. Now, another question:
If God wanted to, could He make 2 = 3? If so, then He can defy logic, and if he can defy numeric logic than He cannot describe Himself numerically. But, disregarding that, He cannot make one thing equal both 2 and 3 things at once. For if I have 3 coins, one cannot consider it two coins in any sense further than the names given to the numbers.
God cannot defy numbers (or any logic for that matter), and can also not define them in any sense other than their names. Numbers describe God, confine Him (as He cannot be both two Gods and one God at the same time). However, God does not confine numbers. Numbers describe everything in their realm and their realm is limited by their own nature, not by a limit set by God.
Numbers, since they define God but cannot be defined by God, then numbers are superior in power to God in some respect as their definitions are more absolute and powerful. Now, if this numeric logic is more powerful than God and, according to Descartes, only things may exist if something of equal or greater power can create something, then there must be a being higher than God or the numeric logic is God.
Either way, there would be two beings, making the Bible incorrect and the Christian God therefore not exist.
_______________________________
First, let me ask you a question:
Before anything existed (aside from God), was God defined as singular? One? Or did God first have to define numeric logic before being considered singular?
Obviously the former, for if it is the latter: how many Gods were there before the creation of numeric logic? If you say more than one, then God cannot be eternally singular as He claims. If singular, then numeric logic must exist. If undescribed, then He cannot be eternally consistent in being the only God (as only implies and necessitates one).
So, numbers precede or run alongside God. Now, another question:
If God wanted to, could He make 2 = 3? If so, then He can defy logic, and if he can defy numeric logic than He cannot describe Himself numerically. But, disregarding that, He cannot make one thing equal both 2 and 3 things at once. For if I have 3 coins, one cannot consider it two coins in any sense further than the names given to the numbers.
God cannot defy numbers (or any logic for that matter), and can also not define them in any sense other than their names. Numbers describe God, confine Him (as He cannot be both two Gods and one God at the same time). However, God does not confine numbers. Numbers describe everything in their realm and their realm is limited by their own nature, not by a limit set by God.
Numbers, since they define God but cannot be defined by God, then numbers are superior in power to God in some respect as their definitions are more absolute and powerful. Now, if this numeric logic is more powerful than God and, according to Descartes, only things may exist if something of equal or greater power can create something, then there must be a being higher than God or the numeric logic is God.
Either way, there would be two beings, making the Bible incorrect and the Christian God therefore not exist.