Vlad,
For any given words there are usually different definitions so let's start with Omni, derived from the latin. When proponents or opponents of the ''God of the Omnis'' for instance talk about omnipotence do they mean a God that can do literally everything including the absurd or impossible...or do they mean just the possible? Or does it mean all the power there can possibly be derives from God Similarly, since Benevolence is a felt thing or a subjective emotion there must be as many definitions of it as there are people
A “god of the omnis” is
your claim, so it’s
your job to tell us what
you mean by it. If though by “omniscient” you actually mean “knows lots of things, but not the consequences of his actions” or some such that’s a fundamental redefinition of the term, and it’s special pleading to boot.
Omnimonstrous and maybe just monstrous suffers from the same definitional problems as omnibenevolence in that it is immeasureable, and often felt and subjective. But for those who hold to moral realism or even people like yourself who do when it suits let us examine God. He creates potential and that which has potential. Is that in itself a monstrous thing? If not how far along the heirarchy does it become monstrous?
Gibberish. If someone plants a bomb in a crowded railway station and then walks way, he’s responsible for the carnage that ensues. That’s what your god story entails when he sets in train “creations” that lead eventually to babies having brain cancer.
If we have ruled out physical design and specific creation at any level then we can't think of anything going wrong.
Non sequitur. “…physical design and specific creation” is still your claim, and it goes wrong because babies get brain cancer as a result.
I think you mean how did man go wrong?
Then, as so often, you think wrongly. I meant how did the god of your story go wrong.
By making the wrong moral choice since we cannot say physics can go wrong.
So where are you getting your idea of something going wrong from?
So babies get brain cancer because other people make wrong moral choices?
Is that really what you want to claim?
Are miracles illogical though?
Yes.
Answer nowhere near as absurd as Square circles, black being the same as white, infinite regression, composite necessary beings, circular heirarchies, contingency without necessity etc
1. Category error. You’ve cheated by lumping together logical impossibilities (eg square circles) with logical possibilities (eg contingency without necessity).
2. What scale of illogicality are you applying here that makes you think someone being actually dead for a bit and then alive again for example is less absurd than any other absurd claim?
Once again, your inability to reason is letting you down here.