Quote number one!
Consider an uncollapsed quantum wave function.
All That Is isn't actually complete.
Again, uncollapsed quantum wave function. The only difference between this universe and all possible universes is that you're observing this one.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation
If that is an accurate description of "objective" reality, then All That Is is functionally equivalent to All That Could Possibly Be.
Sorry, I was kind of just using All That Is as an entirely literal interpretation (that is, only things that exist at the specific moment of 'now', not including things in the past or future.)
Yet that still doesn't include All That Could Not Possibly Be, does it?
Hence, there is still something that God does not contain.
Hence, imperfect.
Quote number two~
it's different to the normal kind of "Omnipotence" ascribed to a 'God' (that is, being capable of literally everything.
Yes. But most people seem to think of god as a bearded man in the sky who wants worship and cares who you have sex with. The concepts we're discussing are simply beyond what most people are capable of conceiving. You don't start kindergarteners with calculus. You teach them how to add first.
You seem to have overestimated me. I'm a mere high schooler, nothing more, nothing less.
Regardless, as you may have understood from the quote of myself in my reply to you, that isn't my interpretation of God at all. I believe that a god like that could exist, with the caveat being, as always, It cannot be Utterly Perfect. This is probably the most concise summary:
Its motives cannot be discerned, its thoughts cannot be inferred, its existence cannot be comprehended.Quote number three!
Going with the interpretation that God Is Everything, It isn't an entity because It cannot interact.
You are I are interacting right now.
This, incidentally, may be the answer to the great question: "Why?"
Yes. However, you may have possibly misunderstood what I meant by that: You are something outside of my system. If you were part of my system, then interacting with you would not make me an entity. However, as I said, you are not, and thus I am indeed an entity. God, if we are using the interpretation you proposed (which is an interesting theory that I've thought about before but never really discussed) then It is Everything. There is nothing outside of It. It cannot interact (with something outside of Itself) so It is simply a system, and not an entity.
Does this last past refer to the above or what came next? (Answer to the question.) My apologies, but I'm not sure what you're trying to suggest.
Quote number four!
Where do you believe 'God' came from?
I'm not in a very good position to to say, and I'm more comfortable with "I don't know" than speculating turtles.
But one possibility I occasionally consider:
x^3 + y^3 + z^3 - 3xyz - (x+y+z) * (x^2 + y^2 + z^2 - yz - zx - xy)
Equals zero.
But it's a very interesting expression of zero.
Although I suspect that's more probably an explanation for the existence of the universe. As for "God," "the system" ...the very possibility of a thing like possibility existing...I just don't know. I can't even say with certainty that physical reality actually exists as anything besides a hallucinated experience. I'm not in a position to answer your question.
Mmm... I may be misunderstanding once again, but are you suggesting that, as that maths equation did, 'God'/the universe is simply something born of nothing? Ultimately it equals zero but there is an expression for it that has substance. I'm not sure if the fact that there are three different pro numerals has something to do with the fact (well, nothing is really 'fact', but the perceived fact) that there are three physical dimensions.
If I haven't misinterpreted here, then I think that agrees with something I hold to be mostly true:
That everything in the universe, is ultimately, equal to nothing. The only thing that can be said to exist with no end is time itself, (possibly symbolised by the lack of a fourth pro numeral. The equation equals zero, and if time were there it would not.)
Anyway, basic premise:
Time is the only thing that can be said to exist without end.
All things that exist or may exist, no matter for how long, are in essence when contrasted to the infinity of time... Never even there at all. One year, ten years, ten thousand years, ten million years, three hundred trillion years, a google years, a billion googleplex millennia. If time is infinite, then these do not, by comparison, even exist at all.
Everything fades to nothingness.
Of course, I realise that this above thought is heavily flawed. I cannot be sure that time is infinite, and the logic leaps are quite drastic. It's still entertaining to think about the notion, however.
I think I'm reading too much into this, though.
Not particularly. Lytherus appears to be a general gaming/fiction website, and my first thought upon seeing IF is Ironforge.
Never mind then. Bucket was a member of a place lost to time, which I miss quite dearly. You have no resemblance to him, but I thought it worth to check. If those things mean nothing to you, then that is all I needed to know.
One last thing: what once was my favorite phrase, 'Who knows? Not I' has now slipped away. I wonder why. I no nothing more than I once did then. Everything has simply... Disappeared.
Why does time destroy all things? No... Not destroy... Destroy is too active, too glamorous. It simply... Erodes.
As The Hobbit once so aptly put: 'This thing all things devours...'