Metaphysician Undercover         
         I think the intention to do A is clearly a property of the creator.
Now if that intention is necessary, we are stuch with a modal collapse. — Walter
I don't see how we can separate God's Will simpliciter from God's Will to do A. — Walter
Walter         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         
IP060903         
         
Walter         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         Unless if course, doing B is just as good as doing A. — Walter
Walter         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         If an act is good because it is what God chooses, "goodness" is meaningless.
So, I think one act can be intrinsically better than another. But perhaps there are acts that are intrinsically equally good. So God actualizing A would be just as good as God actualizing B. — Walter
Walter         
         
AmadeusD         
         But that is epistemology. God would know what is good, but He doesn't decide what is good, just like He doesn't decide that 1 + 1 = 2, or that square circles can't exist. — Walter
AmadeusD         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         But that is epistemology. God would know what is good, but He doesn't decide what is good, just like He doesn't decide that 1 + 1 = 2, or that square circles can't exist. — Walter
Gregory         
         
wonderer1         
         In principle, they do. They acknowledge God has all-encompassing power. Why would deluding us or merely providing odd empirical data to our minds be outside that? Although, in this case it wouldn't be Odd. It would be the case, and nothing more. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD         
         Christians typically think that God, being good, wouldn't mislead us. — wonderer1
Although, in this case it wouldn't be Odd. It would be the case, and nothing more. — AmadeusD
Walter         
         
Gregory         
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