 Originally Posted by acatalephobic
Word of warning: If your argument only applies to the "typical-omni God", which by my understanding refers to what most people believe to be the characteristics of God(please correct me if I'm wrong in this), my questions/ideas don't exactly apply.
After reading your post, I must say that I am impressed with your approach to discussion. You seem like a rather well versed and open individual. I hope to see all the more from you on the boards. Now for your questions..
1. Isn't it possible that all that is required is communication of the brain to the body?
I mean: if a man could be born and then raised without any human interaction whatsoever, his brain would express to his body hunger, need for sleep, etc. and it is likely that he would either react to these urges or else die (like the instinct we see in other animals). Is it really necessary that his feelings/needs are communicated to another being? Because I don't see how it is necessary to their being met, beyond the fact that to communicate them to a more adept being makes them easier to achieve.
You make the good point about feral children. Although humans can survive on their own just fine without needing to communicate to others, I speak of a much grander scale. As Thomas Hobbes said in the Leviathan, in the state of nature, even the week can survive and beat out the strong by teaming up and forming groups. Humans do this but on a much grander scale. Just like the prairie dogs chirp to one another to warn of danger, humans developed a grand language system to from communities and systems of survival. We learned over time the efficiency of telling one another about our feelings and thoughts and this reinforced our survival tenfold to the point of how we are now.
Or is the expression of needs to oneself the communication you're speaking of?
Nope.
2. Is it possible that God could have the consciousness of its own self being alive, but yet not be conscious of the fact that he is in fact God to others? To be conscious of the self and being alive is one thing, but couldn't the consciousness of being in control of an entire universe require an entirely new set of perceptions?
That is precisely my point actually! I think you had an intuition of this from the beginning. While this argument is intended to disprove the omni-God, it only does it for that. The concept of an all encompassing consciousness is that which can still survive this argument. However, I argue that that this form of consciousness would not be subject to moral reasoning as ours is because moral reasoning is the crux of our consciousness and subject to many other things, etc. etc. This leads to another discussion, obviously.
I mean: if you were to consider human or plant cells as a self-contained universe, they are in fact responsible for the whole of the host organism, and yet they are only concerned with the goings-on that occur within their own cell-walls. I know cells don't have actual brains, and so to some minds no concsiousness, but it is true that their only priority is to survive; just like the other trillions of cells in that organism, and in fact the whole organism itself. (To apply the same logic to the planet, humans, or even God, that we do to cells is a result of my own particular mindset, I realize.)
Yes, we can essentially call this the rule of self-preservation. The typical animal and a lot of humans will inevitably be more focused on themselves. However, the humans are inclined to help their fellow communities in order to reinforce their ability to survive as a whole and to maintain the integrity of their youth. Plants do this in their own way, as you say, but they certainly do not need to survive as communities for the most part. The ones that you can find that do (eg. the ones that replenish and pollinate, etc.) do not need to inform others of their own experiences in order to reinforce their sense of community. Plants surviving as a community would be much different than a phenomenological being. An interesting thought, for sure.
But I only ask because quite often I get the idea that the only way God could effectively and objectively control the universe is if it only applies it's personal, finite rationale--in all cases--to an infinite set of events (sometimes even without realizing they are doing so). Much in the same way humans apply their personal mindset to everything, without realizing that it may be sometimes yield contradictory in some cases. Or the way plants react on a finite set of "instincts" that dictate which path is the one toward infinite growth, even if that means absorbing acid rain or growing in places that will inevitably lead to their being cut down.
Any thoughts/reactions?
This part really depends on defining God. When you say God applies rationale, we have to explore God's capability and limits (or lack thereof) of rationale. I think I see what you mean though - a sort of top-down processing without realization of the sort.
Addition:
In this respect, you are actually utilizing your consciousness to conceive of how God's consciousness would operate which is a significant flaw for a God of consciousness. A top-down-processing modality insinuates that, at one-time, God was a bottom-up processing and had to "learn" how to use these senses and consciousness. If God is eternal or exists only consciously, then there had to be a beginning of God which is wrong as he ought to have been eternal.
Maybe I'm just to influenced by my own middle-school reaction to "The Lifes Of A Cell", or the end of Men In Black where the galaxy is contained within a marble around the cat's neck.
While this is also intriguing, the question of a creator or God still applies to even these situations.
But heck, in philosophy there is room for dreamers, and people who question...isn't there?]
A look at this board will significantly reinforce that the answer is most definitely yes! 
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