Could God make a burrito so hot that even he couldn't eat it?

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In summary: Thus, the question is nonsensical in the absence of a premise that there exists something that God cannot do.But if there is such a thing God cannot do, that doesn't necessarily mean He's not omnipotent. You can't have it both ways. Either the atheist must accept that the question is nonsensical or the theist must accept that there is something God cannot do.In summary, the paradox is a clever manipulation of language that ultimately relies on a nonsensical question. Therefore, it does not offer any evidence for or against the existence of God.

Could he?

  • Yes

    Votes: 1 11.1%
  • No

    Votes: 8 88.9%

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  • #1
C0mmie
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It's a question that boggles the mind. If you answer yes, than God could not eat that burrito, meaning he is not all powerfull. If you give a negative response, you are limiting God's power by saying that he can't make that burrito. Either way you end up with counterevidence to God's existence. Am I right?
 
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  • #2
Originally posted by C0mmie
It's a question that boggles the mind. If you answer yes, than God could not eat that burrito, meaning he is not all powerfull. If you give a negative response, you are limiting God's power by saying that he can't make that burrito. Either way you end up with counterevidence to God's existence. Am I right?
Well, when you get right down to it, you're asking whether God has likes and dislikes which, I think He does (I guess?), in which case it is possible for Him to make it a burrito which is too hot. Or, maybe He just allows us to believe this in order to suit our tastes?
 
  • #3
Originally posted by C0mmie
It's a question that boggles the mind. If you answer yes, than God could not eat that burrito, meaning he is not all powerfull. If you give a negative response, you are limiting God's power by saying that he can't make that burrito. Either way you end up with counterevidence to God's existence. Am I right?

I've been chuckling for the last 20 minutes. VERY funny C0mmie.

If I believed God were all powerful, then I'd say that God could make a burrito so hot he couldn't eat it, and then he'd eat it anyway (sort of like wave-particle duality). In any case, I KNOW for a fact that the Mexican shop down the road can make a burrito which would fry every one of God's neurons.
 
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  • #4
An obvious get out clause is that God doesn't follow your laws of logic, in which case my objections in God vs Logic fall on you like a ton of divine bricks.
 
  • #5
Originally posted by FZ+
... like a ton of divine bricks.
Oh, you must have a very vivid imagination!
 
  • #6
Another response to this is it is beyond our 'human' comprehension.

I don't believe any question we can ask, or imagine, is outside of our comprehension, given time. Although, this doesn't require time to see the obvious contradiction. If this is outside of our comprehension, then wouldn't that also mean GOD is outside of our comprehension?
 
  • #7
was this on the old pf ? i seem to rember it
 
  • #8
You are mistaken.

It was taco last time.
 
  • #9
Taco is much more accurate, what GOD would like burritos
 
  • #10
Thought for the day;

If it weren't meant to be eaten then why would God have shaped it like a taco?

I like the LW Sleeth responce. It seems to me that a god has been constructed that can not only make something so hot he can't eat it, then eat it anyway, but this god could eat it and yet not eat it all at the same instant.
 
  • #11
Did he eat it or not? You say he ate it and did not eat it, so he satisfies both of the contradictions of eating it and being unable to eat it, but he also fails to meet the requirement of both without violating the other. So basically we have an impossible/possible God at the same time:smile:
 
  • #12
Yes it is an impossible/possible situation we have here. All very confusing and I for one avoid thinking about any of it, preferring to trust the interpretations of the priests for what I should and should not believe…for they truly know what is best for me.
 
  • #13
That's quite possibly impossible!
 
  • #14
The only way for a theist to get around this problem, as it seems to me, is to apply the logic of quantum mechanics. The question assumes that god follows the laws of boolean logic (everything is divided into true and false), but according to quantum mechanics a photon can be both a particle and a wave, thought the two are radically different. Similarly, god, should he exist, could both make that burrito that he would not be able to eat and then go ahead and eat it.
 
  • #15
Oh my god(no pun intended)

That's actually a really interesting question.

You could simplify it.

Could god make a problem so hard, that he couldn't solve it.
 
  • #16
maybe he eats it but has heart burn and indigestion... and of course exsplosive diarrea
 
  • #17
What we have here is not a problem of what God can or can't do; but a clever and funny, problem of semantics and Sophilism. In short a retorical paradox. Personally I much prefer tacos to burritos. If we were addressing the subject of tacos I might dive more enthseastically into the problem. But since the question involves burritos I think that it is insoluble. The problen then reduces itself simply to the philisophical merits of the burrito versus those of the taco. I as I have all ready admitted am hoplessly biased in favor of the taco, so I must therefore disqualify myself from any ensueing discussion of this topic.
 
  • #18
Nice one, Royce.
 
  • #19
Originally posted by The Grimmus
maybe he eats it but has heart burn and indigestion... and of course exsplosive diarrea

The big bang, you mean.
 
  • #20
Ah, the famous boulder fallacy! :smile:

Stripping away all the flavor of the paradox, its simplest form is:

"Can God do something He cannot do?"


The atheist is fond of jumping the gun and saying this disproves the possibility of any omnipotent being.

However, more carefully looking at the sentence, one realizes there are actually two independant logical statements here:

"Let A be something God cannot do."
"Can God do A?"

The resolution to the paradox is to realize that the question as a whole is nonsensical if there does not exist something God cannot do. You cannot ask "Can God do something He cannot do?" unless there is actually something He cannot do.
 
  • #21
Hurkyl:
I never looked at it that way. That's a very interesting explanation.
 
  • #22
Very nicely explained, Hurkyl,

This one had been bothering me for some time. I have been guilty of 'jumping the gun' myself, though my stance had steadily been softening. I found this;

Theology - The argument against God's omnipotence

"God is omnipotent, i.e. God can do anything which is logically possible. Making a stone which is so heavy that it cannot be moved is logically possible. Therefore God, being omnipotent, can make a stone so heavy that it cannot be moved. But if God makes a stone so heavy that it cannot be moved, then God cannot move it. But if God cannot move that stone, then there is something God cannot do, and hence God is not omnipotent. Thus if God is omnipotent, then God is not omnipotent. But any property which implies its contradictory is self-contradictory. Thus the very notion of God's (or anyone's) being omnipotent is logically impossible (self-contradictory)."
The argument, as presented just above, is an unholy amalgam of two different arguments, one valid, the other invalid. The valid argument is this (where "G" = "God is omnipotent" and "M" = "God makes an immovable stone"):

[edit by BH]...The notation below didn't copy correctly-best see the link below for accuracy.

G M
M ~G
--------------
G ~G
~G

Although the immediately preceding argument is valid, its second premise is false. The true premise is used in this next argument, but this next argument is invalid:


G M
M ~G
--------------
~G
To derive ~G from the latter pair of premises, one would have to add the further premise, M. But so long as M is false, the conclusion ~G remains underivable. God, thus, remains omnipotent provided that God does nothing, e.g. making an immovable stone, which destroys His/Her omnipotence.

(Question: What if God is omnipotent - as some have argued - of logical necessity and exists necessarily, i.e. in every possible world? The answer, I'm pretty sure, is that, under these conditions, God's making a stone so heavy that God cannot move it is a logical impossibility.)

Taken with consent from;
http://www.sfu.ca/philosophy/swartz/modal_fallacy.htm
Copyright © Norman Swartz 1993, 1999
 
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  • #23
This is another one , a variation on the theme.

Can God create itself?

If God exists, then it is not necessary to create God.
If God does not exist, then there is no God that can create anything.

Practicle solution: God exists for all eternity. No 'creation' of God needed.

Why was God needed, or thought/believed of to exist? To explain the existence of the world, to 'create' the world. The thought or concept is here that in order for the world to exist, it needed to be created, cause the world is thought of, not to be able to have existed for all of eternity.

But: why can't the world exist in all eternity, if we have no problem in thinking that God existed for all eternity?
If we attribute the same power to the world, as we attribute to God, then for sure the world can exist also, independend of and outside of our mind, without being dependend on any mind or construct of mind.

And another thing:

Can I (or anyone) proof that God does not exist?

No I can't, and nobody can. Better said I state that God exists in the form of thoughts/concept that belong to the category of existence of the mind, that is an existence category that depends on the existence of the mind.

Outside of that, I acknowledge only the existence of matter in eternal motion, requiring space and time for it's mode of existence, and which exists independend and outside of my mind, hence has existence of it's own, and does not need a God to contribute or attribute it's existence, if we just are willing to attribute the same power to the material world, as we were attributing to God.

Conclusion:

There is no proof, neither a disproof for the existence of God as something independend and outside of the mind.

Further: all reasonable human beings (with some education) will agree that the concept of God, as something that exists within and dependend of the mind, does exist. If something 'outside' and 'independend' of that thought construct or concept of mind, is really there, is - from this perspective - more or less an assumption.
And lastly: The 'thing' that we can denote with this, that has existence outside of our mind, and which is not in any way dependend of it, we can simply denote as matter, in eternal motion, and requiring time and space as modes of existence of matter.
Apart from that, we really do not need any artificial construct of mind in the form of God, we just need to explore and learn how the material world in fact works through science.
 
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  • #24
Originally posted by C0mmie
Could God make a burrito so hot that even he couldn't eat it?

To answer this, there is no real problem in this. Even I can make a burrito that hot, that God cannot eat it, and for that I only have to assume or state, that apart from my thoughts and mind, God does not exist.

In the more simpler form, it is for everybody possible, to make a burrito that is so hot, that one can not eat it! But be carefull though! Don't eat it!
 
  • #25
Originally posted by Hurkyl
Ah, the famous boulder fallacy! :smile:

Stripping away all the flavor of the paradox, its simplest form is:

"Can God do something He cannot do?"


The atheist is fond of jumping the gun and saying this disproves the possibility of any omnipotent being.

However, more carefully looking at the sentence, one realizes there are actually two independant logical statements here:

"Let A be something God cannot do."
"Can God do A?"

The resolution to the paradox is to realize that the question as a whole is nonsensical if there does not exist something God cannot do. You cannot ask "Can God do something He cannot do?" unless there is actually something He cannot do.


Well your logic here is very flawed. You state that there is not something that God can not do.

But then please show me something that God CAN do! That is a bit of more interest, I would think, cause I firmly state that there is not something that God CAN do. At all!
 
  • #26
Even I can make a burrito that hot, that God cannot eat it, and for that I only have to assume or state, that apart from my thoughts and mind, God does not exist.

Your logic is flawed. If God does not exist, then "God cannot eat it" is a nonsensical statement. :wink:


Well your logic here is very flawed.

Not in the context the original question is typically asked. However, to avoid belabouring the point, I will state a more general claim

The following question is nonsensical:

"Can an omnipotent being do something it cannot do?"
 
  • #27
Not in the context the original question is typically asked. However, to avoid belabouring the point, I will state a more general claim
The following question is nonsensical:
"Can an omnipotent being do something it cannot do?"
Can God prove that question is not nonsensical?

Ok... very confused...
 
  • #28
the question

makes perfect sense

let's say god can do anything. that should be the first criteria for his being god. so,


can God create another God who's more powerful than he is?

can he create a universe where He doesn't exist?

can he create a planet with a billion Gods living on it?

can he kill our immortal souls?

can he permanently turn over ALL of his powers to someone else?


if he did any of these things, would he be god any more? if he doesn't have the power to do any of these things, then was he ever god in the first place?
 
  • #29
Originally posted by Hurkyl
Your logic is flawed. If God does not exist, then "God cannot eat it" is a nonsensical statement. :wink:

Very True indeed. But the nonsensical in it is just is just the fact that such an entity does not exist in any real or material form (so how could it eat anything?)

But what if I said: Donald Duck, instead of God?

Donald Duck, is as we all know a comic figure. But can this talking Duck eat burrito's? We know that in reality no duck exists, that can talk. Does this mean Donald Duck does not exist?
 
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  • #30


Originally posted by AutisticSavant
makes perfect sense

let's say god can do anything. that should be the first criteria for his being god. so,


can God create another God who's more powerful than he is?

can he create a universe where He doesn't exist?

can he create a planet with a billion Gods living on it?

can he kill our immortal souls?

can he permanently turn over ALL of his powers to someone else?


if he did any of these things, would he be god any more? if he doesn't have the power to do any of these things, then was he ever god in the first place?


And therefore "God" is a flawed concept within itself, and for that, can not exist outside of the fixations of our thoughts.
 
  • #31


Originally posted by heusdens
And therefore "God" is a flawed concept within itself, and for that, can not exist outside of the fixations of our thoughts.
And that was my original intent for posting this question.
 
  • #32
God and I love spicy foods. The truth of the matter is, She's a terrible cook, so the can-god-cook-blah matter has never come up. I do most of the cooking, and in return she whips my arse until... um, never mind...
 
  • #33
We can't find god because somebody asked him to Proove that he can commit a Suicide...
yeah, sad story..
 
  • #34
And therefore "God" is a flawed concept within itself, and for that, can not exist outside of the fixations of our thoughts.

How did you arrive at that conclusion?
 
  • #35
Originally posted by Hurkyl
How did you arrive at that conclusion?

Most definitions or descriptions of God will tell you that the world was created by God. The flaw in the reasoning is to think that
a. The world itself can not exist on it's own in all time, i.e. needed to have a 'begin' or 'first cause'
b. Then the need was made for a 'creator' of some sorts, who created the world.
c. To overcome any more questions, as "who created God", to the concept of God is attributed, that God can exist in all eternity.
d. The flaw is that, the property we attribtued to God, we could have already attributed to the world (existence in all eternity) without problem, without the need to introduce a creator.
e. Hence the question on wether God exists or not, is just a rare question, without any meaning realy. God was said to exist in the first place, cause God was needed for the world to be (without God, no world, etc), but when it turns out, no God is needed, what existence can then still be attributed to God? We did not disproof the existence of God, we merely prooved that we don't need a God for the world to exist. This reduces the issue to something of really no importance, and therefore the question should be dropped altogether.
 

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