I'm sorry, I don't quite understand what you are saying here. If it is in reference to me getting a response on this thread, I understand not everyone has the time or inclination to answer everything. I was saying that this has been mentioned before as in "I've seen this question over the years". Not in this thread necessarily, although it had been mentioned here before, too. I was just commenting that a trend seemed to be forming.
Well, you got a response from me, I was just guessing why you'd not had a response. You could have helped it along by making a propositional statement and asking for response I think.
No, it's the same for all worldviews if logic is the basis for thought.
So can we cut to the chase and rather should you ask, "What contradiction? I don't see a contradiction."?
Okay, "What contradiction? I don't see a contradiction."
No, the contradiction cannot be seen with so many other variables. The test is if freewill can exist with exhaustive foreknowledge. In other words, we cannot test if Peter's will was to see if he could overcome exhaustive foreknowledge. (At the time, Peter's will was being affected by many factors and the evidence suggests that exhaustive foreknowledge was the furthest thing from Peter's mind.)
Sure it was, he denied that he'd do it. One of two scenarios here or a combination of both: 1) Extensive foreknowledge (Since foreknowledge by definition means exactly this, it is an easier interpretation for me (regardless of what logical problems occur, because it is straight from scripture). and/or God's determinitive will impossing. OV sees this much more often than nonOV. God has to control and negate free-will in order to make His determined will work. I see this too, but foreknowledge has a stronger hermenuetic as Romans 8:28 is understood.
Huh? Where did I say this? I don't think that is part of the hypothetical at all. Could you show me what you are talking about?
I don't understand what you mean here. Could you clarify? Maybe break up the ideas and explain more?
First of all, EF doesn't negate freewill. It is easy to extrapolate, but it is the way you are looking at it: "If God knows I'm going to wear a black T-shirt tomorrow, I have no choice." Let me try this from a different perspective. If I watch a movie, and the main character is wearing a black T-shirt, there is no way he can wear any other shirt, but was there a choice involved? Your logical train of thought should be the same with the initial question. Just because God knows something doesn't mean we had no choice in the matter. Knowledge doesn't mean determinism and negation of free-will. It is the same question: Did the actor have a choice? Of course he did. The only portion of definite knowledge we share with God, and only partially is hindsight. Hindsight is the only definite knowledge we have. God has foreknowledge (Definite knowledge before it happens). We do not share this at all. All of our foreview is not knowledge of absolutes, but prediction & guesses. OV continually pairs our ability to see future to God's. This is incorrect. God has foreknowledge, we have no such thing.
What is the antecedent to "This"? What's in the previous paragraph? What is the previous paragraph? Another idea? I just don't know what you think I'm making a mistake on so I cannot respond.
For 'this' refer to the statements above on foreknowlege and prediction comparison.
Is the antecedent to "this" the same as the previous sentence. If so, I couldn't understand, and if not then please tell me the antecedent.
ibid
What is the right view? Could you explain?
We do not have definite foreknowledge. We have merely informed predictive ability. God has foreknowledge by definition. This is the crux of our difference, the actual definition of foreknowledge.
That is what the thought experiment is for. It includes a contradiction. Is the bottom line that you don't see the contradiction?
I see 'your' contradiction, but I continue to try and dispell it. Foreknowledge does not affect freewill, just like my knowledge that an actor wore a black shirt did nor negate his freewill. The only definite knowledge we have is past. God has definite foreknowledge, we do not. Knowledge of future does not affect freewill any more than knowledge of the past. It is the same issue.
But none of these passages speak to the problem at hand. Also, don't you think OV'ers have seen your proof texts? Do you know enough about the OV position to know the standard answers to these proof texts?