2. If God is omniscient then X can't do something different to what God thinks X will do (premise) — TheMadFool
If X can't do something different to what God thinks X will do then X doesn't have free will (premise) — TheMadFool
If will is reason, then subject to reason. If will not-reason, then how is it free? — tim wood
I fail to understand your analogy. — Dfpolis
Or, does such a god himself have free will? What exactly is free will? If will is reason, then subject to reason. If will not-reason, then how is it free? And it would seem that in a world that thwarts all will, that world makes all will free with respect it - how not if failure is a part of every calculation?
Free will is analogous to the domain of a function, possibility the range. The operative primitive concept being "to let." To take any step at all, one first and primordially has to "let" - has to be able to allow for the possibility of - a first specific value, and then others.
And it seems to me that free will is best defined on the individual who's will is in question, amounting simply to this: if for any decision, he or she has the capacity to negate it, then he or she has free will. Buridan's ass then necessarily possesses a free will, although not necessarily the ability to use it to good result. — tim wood
2. If God is omniscient then X can't do something different to what God thinks X will do (premise)
— TheMadFool
If God knows X does Y because X freely chooses to do Y, this is re-phrasing the principle of identity. This says nothing about what causes Y -- simple that X does Y. — Dfpolis
If X can't do something different to what God thinks X will do then X doesn't have free will (premise)
— TheMadFool
This is an equivocation. In 2, "can't" denies the possibility of God erring about what is real. In 3, it denies the possibility of X choosing freely, which has nothing to do with whether God knows the truth of how X acts. If X chooses freely and God knows it, there is no problem. — Dfpolis
If God knows X does Y because X freely chooses to do Y, this is re-phrasing the principle of identity. This says nothing about what causes Y -- simple that X does Y. — Dfpolis
I probably didn't understand what you mean here but if one imputes a cause to Y then, we're presupposing determinism is true and that's begging the question. — TheMadFool
When God knows X will do Y, it means that, on pain of God losing his omniscience otherwise, X must/will do Y when the time comes. — TheMadFool
You said that there's an equivocation fallacy in there somewhere. Can you point out where exactly? — TheMadFool
The argument for the absence of free will given that God is omniscient proceeds as follows: — TheMadFool
o far so good but the cause, if there is one, arising from God's foreknowledge can act before a person makes decisions. — TheMadFool
Taking this to its logical conclusion, foreknowledge of any kind, god's or a time traveler's, should have causal power of some nature to force people to make decisions according to what was foreseen. — TheMadFool
There are non-deterministic methods available for foreseeing the future — TheMadFool
Maybe God's omniscience works like any other argument one has with a theist: — Pro Hominem
Yes, like instead of responding to what the theist actually says, the atheist spins a demeaning fantasy. — Dfpolis
3. If X can't do something different to what God thinks X will do then X doesn't have free will (premise) — TheMadFool
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