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04-17-2003, 09:45 PM | #61 | ||||||||||||||
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To Angrillori
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Below, I will discuss in more detail this supposed world C in which no one denies God. I will posit that it may be the empty set. Quote:
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If you want to discuss some of these exact goals, then I guess we can, though I don't exactly see how it is relevant. Quote:
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I guess at this point I want to introduce a new argument: theoretically speaking, there may have been NO possible world C in which all the individuals therein would have chosen to be saved. In the words of Craig, responding to a similar argument: "There may not be a compossible set of individuals such that if you put all of them together in a world, all of them freely receive God's salvation and are saved." IOW, we have no way of knowing that the set of all individuals who exist in a world C, all of whom freely accept God, is not, in fact, the EMPTY set. Therefore, you cannot definitively claim that God could have created a world in which all people always choose good over evil, because it may fall into the same category as C', as a world which would have been infeasible for God to create. Another point regarding this quote: you talk about God creating this universe as opposed to "a corresponding free-will universe WITHOUT hell or evil." But, as I've already somewhat explained, the latter would not correspond to the former at all. Take away suffering and hell from this world, and you have a world that is probably in no way similar to this one, and that necessarily, since God didn't choose it, does not fulfill his purposes as well as this one. The point is that you cannot isolate certain negative attributes of this C and claim that God could have created some C' that was identical to this C, except for the fact that it did not include this or that attribute. Applications of Chaos Theory prove this idea. Quote:
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Sometimes I take different sides of the coin theologically when dealing with different arguments, just for the heck of it. I should have been more clear that I was doing so in this case. My apologies. |
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04-18-2003, 07:39 AM | #62 | ||
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Re: To Angrillori
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1) Creation wasn't necessary. A benevolent God would have chosen NOT to create a world in which suffering outweighed joy. 2) The concept of a "will, goal or plan" implies a specific end result. An OmniGod could just as easily create the end result and avoid this process. Again, that means that this universe is unnecessary. -Mike... |
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04-18-2003, 09:46 AM | #63 | |
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One more tme.
Just for emphasis. The set of universes in which no one goes to hell is guaranteed not only to NOT be the empty set, but to, in fact, contain an infinite number of elements.
If there are always a finite number of decisions and an infinite number of scenarios, ANY and EVERY combination of decisions made is guaranteed. Your infinity just isn't large enough. Next, consider this: If I know a restaurant that serves ice cream sundaes, and offers peanuts on top at no extra charge or hassle. Then, when I later see you eating a sundae with peanuts on top, I know you chose peanuts. You didn't have to have them, it wasn't easier or harder for you to order with or without peanuts. I know when the clerk asked "Do you want peanuts on that?" you said YES. Replace you with God, sundae with universe, and peanuts with going to hell. Earlier we mathematically showed thatthere IS in fact a universe with free will in which no one goes to hell. And, with infinite possibilities and finite choices made in each, there are infinite universes where no one goes to hell. As long as infinity>any finite number this is true. The rest just follows. Quote:
Doesn't this seem begging the question a bit? God must want to minimize suffering, so this must be the minimum amount of suffering? This seems to be what your argument boils down to. But I think, as I've pointed out above, mathematically, and logically (definition of omnipotence) then a universe without ANY human-caused evil and suffering and hell-going-to IS viable for ANY possible goal a foreknowing omnipotent God may have. In someone elses words, for an omnigod, since the idea of a 'means to an end' is irrelevant, then every means must be its own end as well. This includes suffering and evil and hell. |
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04-18-2003, 11:48 AM | #64 | ||||||||||||
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To mike_decock & Angrillori
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“As long as there are always a finite number of decisions made, then it is a statistical certainty that in infinite tries, a set of conditions will lead to the result 'no evil choices chosen.'” But this statement is false. If there is no compossible set of individuals who all freely choose to accept God, i.e., if such a case is the empty set, then you have a situation in which there are an infinite number of possible starting conditions, and NONE that include free-willed beings and lead to the result of “no evil chosen.” It’s like saying “given infinite starting conditions for the universe, it is a statistical certainty that one of them will lead to the result of C’ (described above) obtaining.” The problem is, there is NO compossible set of circumstances that fit the definition of C’. Quote:
1) If an OmniGod created the universe, he would have created the one that fulfilled his purposes as much as possible. 2) One of an OmniGod’s purposes is to minimize suffering. 3) Therefore, all else being equal, an OmniGod would choose world W over W’, if W fulfilled his other purposes equally as well or better than W’, and contained less suffering. 4) Therefore, if an OmniGod created this world, then this world contains the minimum suffering of any possible world that could have fulfilled his other purposes as well as this one. Quote:
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04-18-2003, 12:57 PM | #65 | |||||
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Re: To mike_decock & Angrillori
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An omnipotent being would not need to go through the process of baking the cookie (creation), it can instantaneously materialise the cookie or go straight to the sensation of eating the cookie (desire fulfilled). Quote:
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-Mike... |
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04-18-2003, 01:23 PM | #66 |
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Interesting thread.
Could somebody point me to a particular Bible chapter/verse which shows where humans were given free will by God? I'm having difficulty finding it on my own. I did a search for "free will" and got no results. I did a search for "freewill" and got 17 results, 16 of which were "freewill offerings" and one which was in relation to people choosing to move about the countryside in a letter from king Artaxerxes. But I didn't see anything in Genesis. Tabula_rasa |
04-18-2003, 03:00 PM | #67 | |
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3:4 And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: 3:5 For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil. Oops! That wasn't God giving man free will at all. That was the other team giving man the ability to choose for themselves. God forbid man to have free will in Genesis. Maybe it's some later book he changes his mind. |
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04-18-2003, 03:35 PM | #68 |
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Knowing the difference between good and evil is not the same as having free will. Free will is a wide array of choices beyond the plain old vanilla and chocolate of good and evil.
Anyway, we see in Gen.2 17 that God says to Adam: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die. So God does tell Adam that he shouldn't eat from the tree. Problem is, according to the story, God didn't bother getting around to tell Eve. Even then, it's not clear that Adam knew he was eating fruit from that particular tree. Tried and convicted of unknowingly purchasing hot goods. Looks to me like God made a complete bollocks of the whole affair. Apologists? Tabula_rasa |
04-18-2003, 04:26 PM | #69 |
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Ahh, but knowing the difference between good and evil is exactly what free will is. Free will is not the opportunity to make a choice but the ability to make choices. It is the freedom to use ones "will." And you cannot have a will without the ability to discern. There are a wide range of choices between good and evil…but not if you who haven't the concept of what they are. There are many shades of pink between white and red, all of which are meaningless to a blind man.
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04-19-2003, 12:49 PM | #70 | ||||||
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To mike_decock
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And anyway, I don't see the relevance of such quantifications. Even if it is the case that there is a greater numerical amount of suffering than joy in this world, what does this prove? Such a state must have been necessary for God to fulfill his purposes to the max; otherwise, we would see less suffering and more joy. Quote:
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Define world C as this world. Define world C' as a world that is EXACTLY the same as C, except that in C' Hitler did not decide to attempt to exterminate the Jews. C' is not a possible world. It is not a possible combination of free will choices. The fact that Hitler, in C', does not make the free will decision to attempt to exterminate the Jews obviously has huge ramifications and consequences for millions upon millions of people. Think about all the lives that would have changed (Hitler himself, those people who would have worked in the concentration camps, the Jews who would have been victimized during the Holocaust, etc., etc.) drastically because of this ONE different decision. These people would go through completely different circumstances in their lives - they would be presented with free will decisions they wouldn't have encountered in world C;also, they would not have free will decisions in world C' that they would have had in C. This is obviously the case because they would be in completely different circumstances in C' as opposed to C, and circumstances clearly have a large effect on WHAT choices one can make. But since this is the case, C' FAILS to be a possible world, because it is defines as EXACTLY the same as C except for Hitler's aforementioned decision, and it obviously does not fit this definition, because of the already-described changes that would occur in C' that would make it distinct from C. Quote:
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