Suppose that the future is determined, either by god or by physics....is there a way for god to know the future without ultimately causing determinism? — Augustusea
Theological fatalism claims that god's Omniscience entails a necessity for the specific action that god knows will happen in the future, now a friend I was debating this with, claims that god's knowledge is independent of the universe, and therefore does not entail determinism, which I find illogical and faulty,
but I want to ask is there a way for god to know the future without ultimately causing determinism? — Augustusea
Suppose that the future is determined, either by god or by physics.
Does that tell you what it is that you will do next? Does that help you decide wether to have an egg or cornflakes for breakfast? — Banno
I think it tells you that you do not need to decide. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think it exposes a fatal flaw in his beliefs, just a fatal flaw in his definitions. — Philosophim
"As knowledgeable as a being can be." You can site the fact that God genuinely does not know what a person will do before they do it, as why would God bother telling people to act a certain way? — Philosophim
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