Second, there is always the possible world that J.L. Mackie describes: beings who, through their own free will, always choose to do good. If Mackie's world is possible and God can create this possible world, then the free will defense fails. — Chany
now the response is to say God cannot actually create this world and that it is up to the agents within the world to make it happen, but I do not see how, without claiming that God cannot have foreknowledge of the actions of free creatures, one can avoid God's ability to foresee which possible world contains no moral evil and create that world. — Chany
here is an interesting discussion, one that I have never personally seen discussed, about God's responsibilities and morality if God cannot know the actions of free agents ahead of time, as God effectively would be creating the world blind. — Chany
Again, that explains why you are having so much difficulty with the free will defense. — aletheist
The point is that if God is real, then "perfectly good" is whatever He is. If that turns out to be different than what we humans define as "perfectly good," then we are the ones who have it wrong, not God. — aletheist
Which goes to the question of why God created Lucifer in the first place. — Marchesk
Is free will supposed to be something that God cannot know about in advance? That would seem to place a limit on omniscience, and God knowing or existing through all points in time. That God is subject to time like created beings are. — Marchesk
That is an interesting question. So God plays dice with free will? — Marchesk
Some say that this issue is resolvable such that both God's foreknowledge and human freedom can be preserved. — Chany
God's foreknowledge that Jane will buy the red car does not cause Jane to buy the red car, He simply knows beforehand that she will freely choose to do so — aletheist
He created time — aletheist
To say that time did not always exist is to say that there was a time before time, which is absurd. — Thorongil
Per the IEP article on "Foreknowledge and Free Will," "Ultimately the alleged incompatibility of foreknowledge and free will is shown to rest on a subtle logical error. When the error, a modal fallacy, is recognized and remedied, the problem evaporates." — aletheist
Even Big Bang cosmology posits a "beginning of time." — aletheist
Ultimately the alleged incompatibility of foreknowledge and free will is shown to rest on a subtle logical error — aletheist
Per the IEP article on "Foreknowledge and Free Will," "Ultimately the alleged incompatibility of foreknowledge and free will is shown to rest on a subtle logical error. When the error, a modal fallacy, is recognized and remedied, the problem evaporates." — aletheist
The Big Bang is a singularity and a singularity is just a word used to describe the breakdown of physics equations. — Thorongil
Can you summarize the error? — Thorongil
Please explain, in your own words, the modal logic and how the problem of divine foreknowledge I presented is solved. — Chany
Can you summarize the error? — Thorongil
Please explain, in your own words, the modal logic and how the problem of divine foreknowledge I presented is solved. — Chany
I don't think free will justifies the existence of evil, regardless. Not for a perfectly good God. A different sort of God, sure. — Marchesk
Are you saying, then, that we can meaningfully talk about something that was before the Big Bang? — aletheist
It is not the case that Jane buys the red car because God knows that Jane will buy the red car; rather, God knows that Jane will buy the red car because Jane (freely) buys the red car. — aletheist
that God would have been a better God if He created us without the capacity to choose. — Metaphysician Undercover
My issue is with the parenthetical "freely" you included. What is that adding? What does it even mean? — Thorongil
I would say there is a third option that people in this debate rarely talk about: that it could be better had God not created us or anything at all. The framing of your question is such that it makes God create either way, it's just a matter of what he creates. Well, I don't think we can assume that. If God was free to create, why did he choose to do so? — Thorongil
God's knowledge that Jane will buy the red car does not entail that Jane will necessarily buy the red car, such that buying the blue motorcycle instead is impossible. The latter is thus still an alternate possibility, and Jane freely chooses to buy the red car (in the libertarian sense), rather than being (deterministically) compelled to do so. — aletheist
God's knowledge that Jane will buy the red car does not entail that Jane will necessarily buy the red car, such that buying the blue motorcycle instead is impossible. The latter is thus still an alternate possibility, and Jane freely chooses to buy the red car (in the libertarian sense), rather than being (deterministically) compelled to do so. — aletheist
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