Fred-Rick
2 min readJan 21, 2022

--

Four hundred years ago, Spinoza already formulated the correct answer: God is real, but only when viewing God as an abstract.

One hundred years ago, Gödel delivered the final perspective with his Incompleteness Theorems:

Thoughts leading to an ultimate unity are incorrect.

So, we must conclude, based on logic, that if we follow up on the idea that God is real, that God cannot be Almighty. God must to some fundamental extent not be the unifier of all.

On close examination, the word Almighty is a brain fart because it consists of two words that cannot be used in combination. All can be replaced by 1, and Mighty can be replaced by 1st. One cannot have the concept of a First when describing an All. That is like saying that everyone can do better on a test than the average outcome; it's a brain fart.

Men -and not women- have turned God into a War God and as we know complete obedience is demanded in an army to be most successful. That success made God a single God. United we are stronger against our enemies. Note how Unity always exists in a combination of competition with others. Success over others made God not share with other gods. Only after complete victory, only then became God more benevolent.

We inherited a War structure in our thinking, not a natural structure. God is not a complete entity, for creation could only have come about after the (partial) sacrifice of the original God. Not even God can create something out of nothing. Not even God can conquer space, the only infinite reality in our material universe. Something went kaput before creation got established.

If we want an honest discussion about God, then the word God must be defined first and not hung in the air like a loose balloon. In Greek, the word for God Theo means a balloon that is always tied to the facts. Too many have an idea in mind about God that is like a loose balloon. That is a brain fart.

https://fred-rick.medium.com/facts-and-beliefs-are-the-same-12eb4c1b1b8d

--

--

Fred-Rick
Fred-Rick

Responses (1)