So Allah is not all powerful then?
Response: Depending on your meaning of "all powerful".
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So Allah is not all powerful then?
fair enough.Response: Depending on your meaning of "all powerful".
Response: First off, there is no contradiction, but rather a misreading on your part. I clearly stated that God has the ability. It's written in black and white. When someone says "have" or "has", it means posession. Thus I am saying that Allah(swt) posseses an ability to create evil, yet Allah's(swt) mercy and compassion prevents Him from using his ability. That's not a contradiction. A contradiction would be if I said that he does posses an ability then said that he doesn't. I rather said that Allah posses an ability in which He can not perform. If a person has the ability to drive and yet they posses no car, does that mean that they no longer posses the ability to drive? No. They still posses the ability, but without a car, they can not perform their ability. The same is for Allah, who has the ability to create evil, but his mercy and compassion prevents Him from performing his ability. Again, there is no contradiction.
Secondly, if your point is hypothetical, this is the first time you've said so, which is why it was never tooken to be hypothetical.
Isn't there a third option here?My moral compass tells me that anyone torturing for torture's sake -- even if God does it -- is not "good" whatsoever. Even if DCT were true, I could never subjectively agree that torture for torture's sake is "good."
I run into a conundrum then: if DCT is true, and my "moral compass" comes from God, then God has supplied me with at least one sense/rational function that isn't aimed at generating true beliefs. Assuming DCT is true, my "moral compass" is faulty since I mistakenly believe that God torturing for torture's sake would be "evil."
In Gnosticism God is beyond good and evil
Good and evil are products of the Demi Urge, who can be seen to be like the ego personified
everythign that is 'bad' about a personality
greed, lust, avarice, selfishness, narcassicistic tendancies, sociopath
etc....
Gnosticism argues many people today and in the past...and many religions
actually follow this
Response: God has the ability to create evil, yet God is incapable of performing the ability. An example would be you and the idea of killing your mother. You have the ability to do so, yet your compassion won't allow you to.
Our egos personified contain only bad things? I'm pretty sure I don't agree with this.
Or were you saying that the Demi Urge is God's evil ego personified? :help:
If you are psychologically incapable of driving a car, then you lack the ability to drive it, whether or not you possess the car and the knowledge of how to drive it.
Look, my friend, you need to understand what a contradiction is. It is the simultaneous affirmation and denial of a proposition. On the one hand, you say that Allah is able to do something. On the other, you say that is psychologically incapable of doing it. In your contradictory words, "Allah possesses an ability that he cannot perform". Either he is able to do it, or he is not. You are simply trying to have it both ways--denying an ability that you claim he has. What you are doing here is trying to weasel out of the implication of the DCT, because it commits you to admitting that God-driven morality can easily undermine human morality in principle.
The real issue here is that some devout Muslims and Christians believe that God is capable of ordering them to commit atrocities and that he does order them to do so. You claim that it is against his merciful nature to order such things, but, if you truly believe that whatever God wants is good, then torture and murder can be considered good if God orders such acts. Mercy becomes meaningless in the face of the DCT, because you can simply declare that whatever God declares merciful is ipso facto merciful.
From the OP, it has been obvious that we were discussing a hypothetical question. Moreover, because I am an atheist, everything I discuss about God's nature is a hypothetical discussion.
That doesn't make sense. If I'm a slave to my compassion, then I'm heteronemous to my emotions. That would mean I don't have the capacity to kill my mother. (which by the way is why I reject the religious notions of blame for our actions - some of us aren't wired up in the head the way others are, so some of us are born with tendencies to act in certain ways whether we like it or not)
Therefore, either moral principles can't be subordinate to God's essence, or he is not all powerful (able to do whatever he wants).
The big problem IMO with the theistic view that morality is contingent somehow on god is that it stems from thinking of morality as a set of laws, when in fact they're simply priniciples based on reciprocity.
Besides, the big problem with claiming that morality is somehow dependent on God is that there is no way to know what god wants. Yes Fatihah, I know you'll say "the Qur'an" but billy-joe ray from arkensas will say "the bible" and balginder from india will say "the bagavad gita". So until you guys sort it out and agree on one book, the idea that morality is contingent on god's essense or will is impossible to substantiate.
Response: Again, your inability to comprehend is no fault of mine...
I do not ask that question. You have asserted that he is incapable of performing it. Hence, he really has no such ability. Since you earlier asserted that he did, you have contradicted yourself.You quote me saying "Allah possesses an ability that he cannot perform", highlight the words "cannot" yet ask the question whether Allah can perfom the ability?...
Then you go to say that if God calls torture good then it is good, according to your words, "torture and murder can be considered good if God orders such acts"...
Under the authority of Divine Command Theory, which is the topic of this entire thread. Did you forget that?...And under what authority or proof do you have of this, especially being an atheist? This is a very absurd statement. How does an atheist know what God does or considers?
But your inability to make a comprehensible point is your fault.
I do not ask that question. You have asserted that he is incapable of performing it. Hence, he really has no such ability. Since you earlier asserted that he did, you have contradicted yourself.
Correct.
Under the authority of Divine Command Theory, which is the topic of this entire thread. Did you forget that?
DCT claims that the source of morality is God alone. God defines what is good, not human beings. Do you or do you not agree with this statement?
Response: O.K. It seems that once again, I'm dealing with a person who wants to reduce there argument to a play on words. Fine. I'll play too. So tell us, what is the definition of a contradiction?
A contradiction is the simultaneous assertion and denial of a proposition.
Why?Response: O.K. Now show me any dictionary definition which defines the word contradiction the same way, if you are truthful.
Why?
What is YOUR definition of the word contradiction?
One of the horns of Euthyphro's Dilemma often championed by theists is Divine Command Theory (DCT), which is described in brief as the notion that God is the sole arbiter of morality. A proponent of DCT would reply to the question, "Does God do good because it's good, or is it good because God does it?" with "It's good because God does it." In other words, there is no transcendental morality [to God]; only God's command to determine "good" from "evil."
This immediately implies that if God were to strike someone dead on the street then this act is "good," since God does it -- assuming DCT is true. Normally theists could draw from classical theodicies and say that God striking someone dead in the street could serve some ultimate good purpose even if we can't see it, so let me clarify a little further.
If God were to torture someone for the sake of torture -- purely to cause pain and suffering, with no ultimate purpose other than the person suffering and experiencing pain -- this would register as "good" if DCT is true. If I stopped my argument here, then I would be falling prey to the fallacy of arguing from adverse consequences, so bear with me while I get to my point.
Response: Why ask why?
In classical logic, a contradiction consists of a logical incompatibility between two or more propositions. It occurs when the propositions, taken together, yield two conclusions which form the logical, usually opposite inversions of each other. Illustrating a general tendency in applied logic, Aristotle’s law of noncontradiction states that “One cannot say of something that it is and that it is not in the same respect and at the same time.”
He asked "why" because my definition was perfectly reasonable. Do you expect a dictionary definition to contradict me? However, since you asked, here is a definition from the Wikipedia page on Contradiction:
My definition was a bit more succinct.