Human Anti-Existence in God's eyes
Let's say we were to create a plane of existence in which the general modern protestant idea of God existed. If I were never to have the opportunity of existence, let's say, due to my sperm never making it to the egg, or my sperm never existing at all, would I still matter to God. Does every potential life matter to God? How would you define "potential life"? Is it just the living individuals who would have a place in his heart/mind. Now that I have existed, does it make my anti-existence validated, or does my experience of life have no justified position in the plane of anti-existence? If we were to create a plane of existence in which another deity existed, (your choice), which of these questions would be valid? Which of these questions are valid/substantial from your perspective? How do you approach this question?
Comments (4)
Many of the notions in the Bible are never explicitly said. The Bible has alot of implied meanings as well as polymorphism (one statement, multiple meanings based on context and situation). If you ever read the book of Proverbs you should start with chapter 1 first which is the chapter many Baptists ignore despite the fact that they read the KJV. That being said on to your question, as far as i know the Bible (protestant theology's attempted source) does not answer all or even probably most philosophical questions. Assuming there is a God, that question you would have to ask him directly.
To see examples of polymorphism in the Bible check out the free pdf (or purchase a carbon copy). Coincidences in the Bible and in Biblical Hebrew by Haim Shore. I would like to note that Arabic that predates Islam also has similarities in polymorphism the same as Hebrew.
That's a great answer thank you
Potential anything is just a thought in the mind.