God is — Play-doh
The Paradox of Omniscience sets up the argument that because God is omniscient, He must know how to learn what he doesn’t know and therefore know by acquaintance lust, envy, and other such things He can’t know. — Play-doh
- @Sir2uif he created it, he must know everything on a personal level.
For example, a person could build an incredibly intelligent robot with AI that would pass any Turing Test, yet the person would not know what it is truly like to feel or think as that robot. The creator might know every mechanical piece in the robot and how it works, but that would not give the creator a personal level in terms of experiencing the same things that the robot experiences.
To summarize, God being a creator does not signify that He knows His creations on a personal level, that knowledge (or lack of) would fall under the question of His omniscience. — Abecedarian
Since God can rationalize all possibilities that could be chosen, he can predict the action of each person — Iwanttostopphilosophizingbutikant
If Individuals can freely choose their actions, then there can’t be any foreknowledge of what they are going to do — lupac
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