Arthur Brain
Well-known member
If God knows what choices people are going to make beforehand then of course it's infallible, that's not under dispute. Stripe's scenario had a completely unnecessary factor and only weakens his and by association your argument frankly. Why even bring God telling a man that he's going to choose one flavour of ice cream over another at all? That would be direct influence and my contention is that having foreknowledge of events/choices in itself doesn't involve that whatsoever. I'm not arguing from a determinist/predestination perspective whatsoever, I'll leave that to the likes of hyper Calvinists.If God infallibly knew that the man would choose chocolate, but the man chose vanilla instead, it means that God's knowledge is not infallible (which means, in case you forgot, "incapable of being wrong"). It's a contradiction, and since God is not contradictory, something has to give.
Either:
God's infallible knowledge of the future
Or:
God's goodness (in that He lied about the man choosing chocolate when in fact he would choose vanilla).
If God knew that the man would choose chocolate, then there was never any choice to begin with, and the man never had the capability of acting freely.
It's not a matter of "tampering with his will or choice," which begs that he HAS those things to begin with.
It's that there never was any will or choice at all.
All the difference in the world.
If everything that has ever happened never could have happened any differently, then that means that there's no point to any of it, because it's all just a play being acted out, following a script written in God's mind. Which means that every wicked thing that ever happens also comes from God's mind.
If determinism is true, no person is capable of doing other than what God knows they will do. The man literally is incapable of choosing vanilla, simply because God infallibly knows that he will choose chocolate.
The question @Stripe asked exposes this very quickly, simply by stating that God tells the man he will choose chocolate.
I don't know about you, but when someone presents me two options, and tells me that "You WILL choose this option, and not the other," I have a desire to choose the opposite, simply to prove him wrong. (This has to do with how "reverse psychology works".) THAT is the essence of a will, the "ability to choose otherwise." If one cannot choose otherwise, then he does not act freely.
Do you understand the difference between God knowing the choices that people will make and allowing them will to make those decisions and programming events so that everything happens to a preset decree? You've had the limited will to act freely today on all manner of things whether God knew what you were going to do or not. Nobody has absolute free will but that gets deeper into an argument where you still don't seem to grasp the difference between foreknowledge and predeterminism. They're not the same thing.