It was suggested by a mod that I re-post this here, to avoid it getting derailed or hijacked, so here it is.
This has been discussed at some length on 'Searching for God', but it keeps getting mixed up in other topics and spats, so I thought I'd start a thread devoted to that topic alone.
As I argued there, "omnipotence" can be defined as "able to do anything that can be done", a definition that retains the idea of "all powerful", not merely "very powerful". I suggested that free will, which it is generally agreed is a limit on God's power over humans, applies in some analogous sense to all matter - that it is intractable stuff, and even God can't do absolutely as God likes with it. This might lead to an explanation for the existence of suffering. This idea is not original to me - I've read something along those lines elsewhere, although I came up with it independently.
Before the non-believers tear me to pieces (again), it is worth pointing out that admitting this does not prove God: they could, in theory, admit that my definition of omnipotence is valid but still disbelieve.
I'd be grateful if the debate could be conducted in an adult way, without sarcasm, name-calling, or accusing others of lying (and I know I've been guilty of the first two myself, though in my defence only reactively) It would also be nice if one particular poster could refrain from yet again opining that there is no evidence for the existence of God, or that the God of the Bible is a psychopath. It's irrelevant.
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