Divine Simplicity and human free will My main objection with the argument is within premise five. There’s an underlying assumption within your argument that God’s omniscience implies knowledge of the future, and if God does have knowledge of the future, then human actions are determined (libertarian free will does not exist). Additionally you claim there is a causal link between God’s knowledge and what occurs (“if anything God knows must occur necessarily”). The claim that if God has foreknowledge of an event, then it is determined, is not necessarily true. God can know the outcome of an event, but his foreknowledge is not the cause of that outcome. It can be true that both God knows the outcome of an event, and a person chooses and acts freely. God has knowledge or holds beliefs because they are true, his knowledge or beliefs do not create truth. Additionally, it is not necessarily correct to claim God has foreknowledge of an event, provided that we understand God as existing outside of time. If God exists outside of time, then his knowledge of an event does not exist before the event happens. If his knowledge of an event does not exist before an event happens, but exists outside of time, then it would be more correct to claim God knows everything that will occur and has occurred, rather than anything God knows must occur necessarily. The former has no causal implication, and leaves open the possibility of libertarian free will. Additionally, there is a problem with premise four. If premise four is true, then God can’t have separate traits, only one all encompassing trait. If that’s the case, then all of God’s traits are necessary, but what he gets from them may not be. It could be the case that God’s omniscience is necessary, but that doesn’t mean everything he perceives with it is as well.