Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-34936180-20180412014931/@comment-29564364-20180416183952

DeathstroketheHedgehog wrote: [...] With omnipotence, there is no sort of "exploring" or "learning" or etc, as you already know what will happen and what would've happened. [...] To give you an example, someone like 12shzarmai thinks of omnipotence wrong: "I would explore everywhere in reality, fiction and totality." You're already omnipresent and omniscient, no need. This is wrong, actually. While Omnipotence, Omniscience and Omnipresence are often associated, they are still three separate concepts independent from one another and if one is omnipotent, they do not necessarily have to be omniscient and omnipresent if they choose so. And regarding Omniscience, a look at its capabilities will tell you that: "Omniscience ("all-knowing") is the capacity to know absolutely everything infinitely.

There is a distinction within this power:
 * inherent omniscience - the ability to know anything that one chooses to know.
 * total omniscience - actually knowing everything."