I find the Apathetic god Paradox very interesting:
If your unlimited, then you would have no needs.
"A god, by definition, has infinite metaphysical power, in that it has no limits whatsoever. It contains all actualities and potentialities within itself, and cannot experience desire or loss, or any other motivating factor.
This may require more explanation, however. How can we say that a god cannot experience any motivating factor? Because motivating factors come from limits. That which pushes us to act, or makes one action more desirable than another, is a value, a need, and therefore limits. Even exterior causes cannot push one to act unless one has a limit that is exploited by that cause.
Being all-knowing, it would have no knowledge to gain, and therefore could not feel any emotion – could never be surprised, angry, pleased, satisfied, dissatisfied, etc. To feel an emotion is an evolutionary shortcut that spurs us to action. A god, being infinite, has no need to act or to have shortcuts.
We can generalize the paradox to any level of metaphysical power. The Amoral God Paradox can be expressed like this:
I .Raising a volitional being’s metaphysical power will generally raise the scope and potentiality of its actions.
II. Raising a volitional being’s metaphysical power will generally lower its need to act, and therefore its moral scope.
Or even simpler, the higher the metaphysical power, the more powerful its moral choices are, but the least it needs or desires to make those choices.
As for how it applies specifically to the case of the god-concept, the Paradox can be used in atheology to disprove the idea that a god created anything. Without any motivation, there can be no action. This can be used in Materialist Apologetics (especially on theistic moral principles, but everything else too), the Problem of Evil and the Cosmological Argument. The Paradox can also be used as a separate argument.
The argument could be constructed like this:
1. If divine creation is true, then the universe was created by a non-limited god.
2. A god cannot have any internal motivating factor, including need, desire, ignorance, or emotion.
3. If divine creation is true, then there was no cause outside of a god before Creation.
4. If divine creation is true, then a god was not subject to exterior causes before Creation. (from 3)
5. A god before Creation cannot have any internal or exterior motivating factors. (from 2 and 4)
6. A god would never act, and divine creation cannot be true. (from 5)"
Apathetic God Paradox