GOD: Concept and Nature Flashcards

1
Q

What is God described as?

Hint: 3 omni-

A

Omnipotent, Omniscient, Omnibenevolent

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2
Q

What does it mean if God is omnipotent?

A

God is all powerful

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3
Q

What does it mean if God is omniscient?

A

God knows all true propositions

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4
Q

What is the core of the argument of God’s omniscience and human’s free will?

A

If God is omniscient, then God knows what i’ll do in the future. If so, I’m not able to do anything different. If so, I’m not free.

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5
Q

What kind of argument is the argument of God’s omniscience and human’s free will?

A

•Deductive
•A priori

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6
Q

What is the argument of God’s omniscience and human’s free will? (laid out)

A

P1: If God is omniscient then God knows all true propositions
P2: If God knows all true propositions then God knows what i’ll do
P3: If God knows what i’ll do then i am unable to do anything else
P4: If i am unable to do anything else then i’m not free
C: Therefore if God is omniscient then I am not free

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7
Q

What is the core of the argument of the Euthyphro Dilemma?

A

There are only two ways of understanding God’s relationship to moral goodness, and both have unacceptable implications

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8
Q

What kind of argument is the Euthyphro Dilemma?

A

•?
•A priori

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9
Q

What is the argument of the Euthyphro Dilemma? (laid out)

A

P1: There are only two ways of understanding an omnibenevolent God’s relationship to morality
A- Actions are morally right independently of God’s commands and that’s why God commands them
B- Actions are morally right because God commands them to be and they wouldn’t be otherwise
P2: Option A is unacceptable because it means that God isn’t omnipotent as God didn’t create morality and can’t control or change it
P3: Option B is unacceptable because
• God can’t give justification for particular actions being morally right or wrong
• Actions we think of as morally wrong could have been morally right
C1: Therefore there is no acceptable way to understand an omnibenevolent God’s relationship to moral goodness
C2: Therefore God can’t be omnibenevolent
MC: Therefore an omnibenevolent being can’t exist

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10
Q

What is the core of the Paradox of the Stone?

A

Wether God can or cannot make an unmovable stone, God cannot be omnipotent

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11
Q

What is the Paradox of the Stone? (laid out)

A

P1: Either God can make a stone that God cannot move or God cannot do this
P2: If God can make such a stone then there is a task that God cannot do (God can’t move the stone)
P3: If God cannot make such a stone then there is a task that God cannot do (God can’t make the stone)
C1: Therefore either way there will always be a task that God cannot do
C2: Therefore there cannot be a being that can perform all tasks
MC: Therefore an omnipotent being is impossible and the concept of omnipotence is incoherent

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