Sure, were not perfect, I already admitted to that. We're not God.
I thought we were discussing my definition but clearly you prefer the route of the derail.
Can you or can you not fault this idea that a perfect God could provide us with the knowledge that he is the one and only perfect being?
You haven't denied that so I take it you concede the point.
It's a meaningless definition. You might as well say that God is the most flargiest of beings. It's gafloon is the sptoptfibliest in the galaxy. Just because you can find the word "perfect" in the dictionary doesn't mean it's applicable in this context.
Not, only is it meaningless, but self-contradictory. Which I showed.
The point of definitions is to help clarify what words mean. Saying that God is perfect adds no clarification.
A being, a little bit better than us could tell us they're perfect, and we'd be unable to judge whether they it was true or not.
Yes, we're not perfect, we already know that. Can we move on?
That's not what I said. I said that we have no way of knowing or evaluating if God is perfect. So why say that God is perfect? Why believe that God is perfect? Why describe something with a property nobody can know it has? Isn't that the definition of just talking shit?
Or to put it another way. Why do you describe God as perfect, even if you know that you could impossibly know this?
At best it would be a baseless assumption.
Apparently, you are still missing the point. And I have to say I suspected precisely that.
's all about the difference between knowledge and belief, which you seem to prefer to ignore. I said, if there is a perfect God, he could impart us with the knowledge that he is a perfect being. I didn't say he could impart us with the belief he is a perfect being. Knowledge is knowledge. It's not belief. If God provides us with knowledge then we have it. Or do we have now to go the route of the dictionary? So, not only your logic is lacking but your vocabulary is deficient.
Why believe something that is unknowable? A person who is able to believe things nobody can know is untrustworthy. We can ignore every thing that person says because we know that their criteria for belief is worthless.
We can also go the logical route. Perfection is something that changes depending on the needs of the person doing the judging. People's needs are different. That means that the perfect being needs to be at least two different types of perfection at once. Most likely a near infinite amount of perfections. Therefore it's a paradox. A perfect being cannot exist. So we know for a fact that God cannot be perfect.
What is not logical in your so-called logical route here is your assertion that perfection changes depending on people. You're free to believe this but, please, don't pretend it's somehow logical to assume so. And I certainly don't.
Ok, I guess it's clear to me you're not prepared to have anything like a logical argument about my definition.
EB
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Yes, perfection changes depending who is assessing... obviously. It's a subjective quality. What is your argument for that it doesn't?
As to your "answer". It's just smoke and mirrors. The problem is that theists have been doing this for thousands of years. They're old arguments and we've had plenty of time to give them thought. Theists keep repeating them. Doesn't make it smart answers.