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02-18-2002, 03:06 AM | #11 | |||||||
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anyways, an agent is free if its choice is the determining factor of the course of events that follows. if future exists along with the presence, then there must be multiple futures so that the agent's choice is a _factor_. if future exist only when the choice is made, then the condition is satisfied because it is a factor of making the existence of future possible. Quote:
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"how is merely seeking the reason for an alledgedly 'necessary' state of affairs _necessarily_ paradoxical? it would _necessarily_ be 'self-referencing' if you assume that the 'necessary' state of affairs is _necessarily_ "self-existing." indeed they are all in adjectives, because you seem to be very comfortable with rhetorics. in limiting yourself from using that word by manipulating grammatical structures, you make it appear to be a legitamate question. of course unless you found your question unimportant, meaningless, out of topic, not worth answering to, not logically connected, or you are already asserting "necessity" while asking how is necessity necessarily be necessary? let me rephrase my original statement: the gist of the problem is not that god lack freewill due to his omniscience. rather, it is the existence of only one future, which enable omiscience, that entails god lack freewill. now, your question of necessity becomes a complete nonsense even though my statement didn't change its meaning. you have absolutely no grasp on what necessity means. i was merely being euphemistic, your habit of playing word games really make any discussions with you meaningless. |
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02-18-2002, 04:05 AM | #12 |
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Ender my man....I am sure it was all lost on'em
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02-18-2002, 08:04 PM | #13 |
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Olorin...
I would think the existence of free-will would depend on the existence of free choices, not foreknowledge. On the other hand, the issue is tricky. I believe we can benefit from studying Leibniz's defense of his brand of theism. In his Discourse on Metaphysics, he addresses many of the same issues inherent in the question you raise, but let me merely refer you to his writings for your own perusal, unless you wish me to get into it in greater detail. In the meantime... As you probably know, Leibniz held that God freely chose to create the best of all possible worlds. This is also to say that God's infinite will was determined by his omnibenevolence. What followed from this choice must of necessity be a consequence of that decision. This gives Leibniz some difficulty when it comes to arguing in favor of our own free-will, but, I gather, we are not toi focus on this here. Now, one may conceive a difficulty that since the world chosen by God is the best of all possibilities, it would appear that God could not choose other than the best. This would suggest that God did not have a real choice in the matter -- therefore no free will. But, we can get around this merely by arguing that since God is omnipotent, it means God is capable of choosing a less than perfect world, despite that God's omnibenevolence would not allow it. There is a real choice in the matter. Similarly we can separate complete foreknowledge from both oomibenevolence and omnipotence. Though God can forsee the world God chooses, this doesn't negate the power God has of choosing other than the world forseen and it is the power to do (or to have done) otherwise, not the doing (or having done) otherwise that is required for free-will. Owleye |
02-20-2002, 07:43 PM | #14 | |
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~WiGGiN~ |
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02-20-2002, 08:25 PM | #15 | |
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02-21-2002, 02:05 AM | #16 | |
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02-21-2002, 04:03 AM | #17 | |||||||||||||||||
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Tani,
I apologize for missing your post above, but this exchange is tending toward incoherence. Quote:
My point is that there is no contradiction involved in two different events that each occur in two different universes even though those same two events would be contradictory if they could simultaneously occur in the same universe. Hence (as far as the difference between the two events is concerned), there is no logical impossibility involved and (thus) no inconsistency involved with God allowing the two events to occur. However, for Theism, there is more than one way that an inconsistency involving the events can occur. Even though there is no mutual inconsistency between the two events, either event (in its respective universe) can be inconsistent with God's plan for that universe. My posts are not intended to be deceptive. I simply rarely have time to provide a lengthy exposition of each point that I am trying to convey. I'm sorry that you find my language difficult to follow in spite of my best efforts to get my points across as concisely as possible. Quote:
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In asking for your definition of "freedom", I am not implying that I don't have one. I only wanted to see if our definitions were in agreement. Quote:
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On the definition that I had in mind for this discussion, a (truly) free agent would be one for whom antecedent causes for choices that are made by the agent, that are outside of the agent itself, could not exist. Quote:
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You have (re)defined "determination" to exclude knowledge of ends without explaining why this must be done. Quote:
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My use of the word "necessary" had nothing to do with your use of "necessarily" above. Quote:
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If God's choices are not free, as your reasoning seems to suggest, then someone or something else, besides God makes God choose what He chooses. IOW, God chooses because He must do so; not because He desires to do so. I don't really have time to continue a long discussion, especially one that involves irreconcilable concepts and definitions. [ February 21, 2002: Message edited by: jpbrooks ]</p> |
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