but what does that mean in a context that isn't strictly mathematical? I'm missing the middleman between "god is omnipotent" and "this means religion is all false"
you're turning god into a number and then seeing what the human mind thinks of that number. that's not a good way to go about theology.
also I'm missing your response to the fact that religion does not in fact require the human mind to understand god completely. most religion even supports this assertion that god's full nature is beyond human understanding. it's allowed for that. it's part of the philosophy and part of the practice.
you're turning god into a number and then seeing what the human mind thinks of that number. that's not a good way to go about theology.
also I'm missing your response to the fact that religion does not in fact require the human mind to understand god completely. most religion even supports this assertion that god's full nature is beyond human understanding. it's allowed for that. it's part of the philosophy and part of the practice.