bahman wrote:As I mentioned before you cannot resolve the issue by defining God as supreme being.
You're missing the point. I'm not trying to prove
that God exists, at the moment: I'm merely trying to show you
what would be entailed in the statement "God exists." Priority one would be to say what one meant by "God." And if one answered, "The Supreme Being," as the Western tradition does, then certain other premises would flow logically from that.
Immanuel Can wrote:
So which do you want to talk about: the Western or Eastern view of what a "God" is?
I don't agree.
That's a nonsensical response. You can't "not agree" with anything there. I've asked you a question, not offered a conclusion.
I think we need to agree with a good definition of God.
That's what I'm asking you for: what is your "good definition of God," as you see it?
I can define God as omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent being. Do you agree with that?
It depends. What do you mean by those terms? In particular, what do you think "omnipotent" would entail?
bahman wrote:
Immanuel Can wrote:
See the dictionary definition, as above.
That is not a fair answer. Seek a dictionary for what word?
I said "see," not "seek," and look "above," in the last message. The blue text is directly from Webster's Dictionary. And the word was "supreme."
Here it is again:
.
Merriam-Webster:
adjective | su·preme |\sə-ˈprēm, sü-\ preem.
1. highest in rank or authority
2 . highest in degree or quality : greatest or highest possible
Immanuel Can wrote:
bahman wrote:
Perfect means as good as it is possible to be.
Sorry; but this is not adequate to clear up the confusion. You need to explain whether you mean
absolute, essential perfection, which one can only predicate of God, or
perfection relative to a thing's particular form and function, which you can predicate of anything that is a "good" example of its type. Which one concerns you here?
I mean absolute as essential perfection.
But if that's the case, then it is not "imperfect" of God to create things that are merely "perfect" in the second sense. There's no evidence that God has a duty to create other things that are "absolute and essentially perfect" in the way that He is. However, the Torah says that when God made creation, "He saw that it was good." That doesn't mean "He saw that it was another god." It just means, "Good for the purpose God created it," that is, "good" in the second sense I outlined.
From a Western perspective, God has neither
obligation, nor analytically, even the
possibility of creating a being as great or "good" as Himself.
bahman wrote:
Immanuel Can wrote:
Well, let me ask you this: is it more "perfect" to create a being that has no will of its own, or to create one that has such potential? Which would be the "higher" act of creation, in your view?
Of course God has a will and act of creation of a God is absolutely better than creating a human being unless you can argue otherwise.
Whaaaaat?

I'm sorry: I really have no clue what you just said. It looks to me totally unrelated to my question.
I'll make is simpler: I just asked you if it was better to create a robot or a free-will-possessing being. Maybe try answering just that, and I then perhaps I can advance the conversation.