arigo wrote:Oh, oh, I've got one too. Since god is all powerful then he must be able to limit his powers, but then he won't be all powerful. PARADOX <--- Just so brilliant.

Jesus, you can super-impose paradoxes on any such concepts. It proves absolutely nothing, logically.
Doesn't it prove that the concept is unsound? You know, like someone just decided to come up with a load of properties that turned out to mutually exclude one another? Saying it's magic doesn't make this problem go away, and most apologists acknowledge this special pleading and define a God that could logically exist.
Nephtys wrote:The argument is this. If laws don't apply to god and he is beyond space/time, he doesn't exist by the definition of exist. That's pretty much as flat out simple as it gets.
I'm not too sure about that. It seems to be artificially limiting the definition of existence beyond "existence exists." A hypothetical example refuting your position would be the excession from the culture novels, or Ace Rimmer from Red Dwarf. These are examples of technologies that can traverse a multiversal plane, between hitherto divided universes.
Ace and the Excession both existed independently of the universe they turned up in, and regardless of whether they ever ended up in their new universes, they would've still existed. Likewise would any number of "beings" that lived in a static state independent of our universe's dimensional setup, though the "plane" of existence would be common to both.
Functionally nonexistent, they would be, though, I guess. I would consider the conclusion of them to be imagined and not real to be a logically justifiable one, even if it was not actually true overall.
Zero132132 wrote:This is based on quite simple logic. We have no proof/evidence of god, so we can't set physical limitations on such a being.
No, we don't have a stringent definition of God, that's the problem. The only definition we're really working with is that it's "outside of space and time" which effectively rules out interference within space and time, since you'd have to interact with temporal mechanisms from an atemporal standpoint. Presumably, being atemporal would simply make temporal goings on "invisible" to you, since you have no means of perception.
IIRC William Lane Craig does not argue that an atemporal God interferes, but that God became temporal when he made the universe, or something like that.
wolveraptor wrote:I think I already mentioned that the universe must be a closed system, or entropy would be fucked up by outside intereference.
I don't see why this has to be the case, there could be only a micron area of the universe interfered with by intersecting another universe, say. or a pin prick that exchanges only the smallest amount of information.