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Old 04-15-2003, 10:02 PM   #11
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Default Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Materialism, God, and Free Will

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I would think, given the sheer number of free-will decisions that are made every day, it would require a preposterous amount of "rerouting" on God's part to ensure any particular outcome.
Preposterous? If you mean in comparison to what any of us can imagine, it certainly would...but God is both the ultimate Micromanager AND the ultimate big picture Guy.

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Yeah, I'm sure it has nothing to do with their state-of-the-art weapons and training, all provided by the US.
Those weapons didn't just fire themselves, nor were the fruits of training brought forth without effort. You think it's no big deal, why don't you try defending a country surrounded by murderous enemies who outnumber your guys 200 to 1.
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Old 04-15-2003, 10:16 PM   #12
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Default This is fun.

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Originally posted by Philosoft
But isn't that the very definition of "predetermined"? If it is true at time T that the man will take the left fork, it cannot be false at time T1, when the action is taken. Thus, there is no possible world at T in which the man takes the right fork. If there was, God would not "know" which fork the man would take.
I agree completely. The argument works for me. But then someone will say "god isn't limited by our understanding" or something like that (see one post above for example) and the back and forth leads nowhere.

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Old 04-15-2003, 11:02 PM   #13
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Default Re: Re: Re: Re: Materialism, God, and Free Will

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Originally posted by Nowhere357
If god is omniscient, and the mind exists, then god knows everything about the mind. I don't understand the last sentence, so I guess I'm missing your point.
I was trying to say that it might be possible to say that, if consciousness is some metaphysical "soul" thing that exists outside of the reality that was created by an omniscient god, then there can exist free will. However, since you point out that, if this god created everything, the mind, even non-physical, would fall under this category as well. I guess that point falls flat, not that I liked it anyhow.

I agree with you overall, that free will is definately not a strong argument either way, which is why I believe it is not a good reason to reject materialism in favor of an omniscient deity, or vice-versa. Given all the evidence, I definately deny the existence of any god that has been postulated except the Deist god, which exists outside of observation.
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Old 04-16-2003, 01:53 AM   #14
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hm, i've never understood the omniscience = determinism argument. i don't see what the causal link between the two is. God may know that i will take road x rather than road y. but how is this knowledge causal? in itself, i don't see that it is, any more than i cause my brother to eat rice crispies every morning by being aware that rice crispies is what he eats for breakfast every morning.
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Old 04-16-2003, 02:09 AM   #15
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Originally posted by chant
God may know that i will take road x rather than road y. but how is this knowledge causal?
Because if god says you will choose x, your decision is now predetermined, and free will is illusion.

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in itself, i don't see that it is, any more than i cause my brother to eat rice crispies every morning by being aware that rice crispies is what he eats for breakfast every morning.
Your brother may surprise you, and eat a muffin. He has free will.

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Old 04-16-2003, 02:19 AM   #16
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but there is a difference between (a) 'God says that i will choose road x' and (b) 'God knows that i will choose road x'. clearly my choice is determined in (a), but i don't see how it is determined in (b).
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Old 04-16-2003, 02:32 AM   #17
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Quote:
Originally posted by chant
but there is a difference between (a) 'God says that i will choose road x' and (b) 'God knows that i will choose road x'. clearly my choice is determined in (a), but i don't see how it is determined in (b).
How about "god says that she knows you will choose x".

You see (a) as a command, and (b) as a no-command. Why the difference?

The bottom line is this: if I have free will then
when the time comes I can choose either path. If god says/knows I will choose x, then when the time comes I no longer have the option of choosing either path - I MUST choose x, and so I have no free will.
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Old 04-16-2003, 02:57 AM   #18
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for case (a) it depends on what we mean by 'says'. if 'says' is used merely as an expression of knowledge, then the statement does not imply determinism for me. here 'God says that i will choose road X' is merely an observation made by God.

but if 'says' is used as an expression of will, in the 'Simon says' sense, where what God says i must do, then determinism is implied.

fundamentally, i don't see how God's knowledge about the choice that someone will make automatically strips the maker of that choice of their free will.

i still don't see any causal connection between God's knowledge about my choice and my making of that choice.
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Old 04-16-2003, 03:17 AM   #19
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Quote:
Originally posted by chant
The argument concerns the situation where god claims to know our choice, ahead of time.

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fundamentally, i don't see how God's knowledge about the choice that someone will make automatically strips the maker of that choice of their free will.
Because if god knows that I will choose x, BEFORE I HAVE DECIDED, then when I finally do decide, what are my choices? Hmm, I can choose either x or y, correct? No, I cannot. I MUST choose x. If I choose y, then god was wrong!

If I must choose x, I have no free will.

Chant, the problem is that you have pre-supposed that god is omniscient. The argument is proof that if god is omniscient, then free will does not exist.

We know we have free will.

Therefore, if god exists, she CANNOT be omniscient.

Well, I tried.
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Old 04-16-2003, 03:35 AM   #20
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hmmmmmm

but God isn't forcing me to choose X rather than Y, he's just aware of which choice i'm going to make.

say i have a time machine. i can hop into the future and read the next reply to this post. i can 'know' the next reply that's going to be written on this thread. in doing so, i haven't participated in any causal way in what is going to be written. i haven't forced the writer of the next post to write what they will write rather than something else. i'm just aware of what it's going to be before they write it.
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