intro2faith
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Billy won't take a bite out of the apple. But it was his choice. God knew it. That's all.
:bang: Why are you so afraid to answer the hypothetical?intro2faith said:Billy won't take a bite out of the apple. But it was his choice. God knew it. That's all.
Knight said::bang: Why are you so afraid to answer the hypothetical?
Come on now . . . I have been fair with you please be fair with me.
Please answer the question.
HYPOTHETICAL NUMBER ONE:
If God knows (perfectly) that in 1,000 years a child will be born and that child will be named Billy. God knows that in 1,010 years Billy (Billy is 10 years old) will pick up a apple and take a bite out of it.
In this hypothetical God know's all these facts perfectly and exhaustively, currently. God knows all of this 1,010 years in advance.
Tell me . . . does Billy have the freedom to not pick up the apple and take a bite out of it?
intro2faith said:I won't answer that question because the bottom line is, God wouldn't KNOW that Billy was going to take a bite out of it if Billy was not going to!
P.S. Thanks for taking the time to discuss this issue - therefore I am giving you some positive rep!intro2faith said:I won't answer that question because the bottom line is, God wouldn't KNOW that Billy was going to take a bite out of it if Billy was not going to!
Knight said that he had no argument with this and depending on what you mean by this, I may not either but if you mean by this that there is nothing unknowable to God then I do not agree and I don’t think Knight would either.intro2faith said:God knows much more than what is knowable to man. What is not knowable to man is knowable to God.
No, if God has full knowledge of the infinite future and that knowledge is perfect then Billy can only act according to 1 set of events. The existence of everything in the universe can only follow one path, the path that God forsaw, but...HYPOTHETICAL NUMBER ONE:
If God knows (perfectly) that in 1,000 years a child will be born and that child will be named Billy. God knows that in 1,010 years Billy (Billy is 10 years old) will pick up a apple and take a bite out of it.
In this hypothetical God know's all these facts perfectly and exhaustively, currently. God knows all of this 1,010 years in advance.
Tell me . . . does Billy have the freedom to not pick up the apple and take a bite out of it?
I'm not Knight but if you're interested in what I think, I would say that the latter is the correct interpretation. It is the only one which would preserve the meaning of our lives, which is to love God. If we cannot choose, we cannot love.kmoney said:A couple questions...
Rev. 17:8 "The beast that thou sawest was, and is not; and shall ascend out of the bottomless pit, and go into perdition: and they that dwell on the earth shall wonder, whose names were not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world, when they behold the beast that was, and is not, and yet is."....
The phrase "...whose names were not written in the book of life from the foundation of the world...." -- I think this can be one of at least 2 ways, maybe you will have more....
I think it can be taken as the names were written in the book of life AT the foundation of the world OR
it is saying that those who didn't have their name written in the book of life at any time between the foundation of the world and now
how do you interpret that verse?
Clete said:I'm not Knight but if you're interested in what I think, I would say that the latter is the correct interpretation. It is the only one which would preserve the meaning of our lives, which is to love God. If we cannot choose, we cannot love.
Resting in Him,
Clete
kmoney said:This is a completely random and pretty much pointless post but this topic reminds me of the one scene in The Matrix, the first and only good one.
The scene I'm reminded of is when Neo first meets with the oracle and she tells him not to worry about the vase, and he says "what vase" and turns as he says it and knocks a vase over and breaks it, then she says what will really get him thinking is if he would have broken it if she hadn't said anything....
anyway, I know it's not a great parallel but I thought of it....
HYPOTHETICAL NUMBER ONE:
If God knows (perfectly) that in 1,000 years a child will be born and that child will be named Billy. God knows that in 1,010 years Billy (Billy is 10 years old) will pick up a apple and take a bite out of it.
In this hypothetical God know's all these facts perfectly and exhaustively, currently. God knows all of this 1,010 years in advance.
Tell me . . . does Billy have the freedom to not pick up the apple and take a bite out of it?
Well that's not what we are saying. God's foreknowledge does detroy freedom because it means that God predestined everything, it detroys freedom because it removes our ability to do or to do otherwise, which is the very definition of what means to have a free will.kmoney said:Clete,
sure I'm interested in your thoughts....
I figured that you and Knight and all the open theists would take the latter interpretation because it fits their open theology, but all I have to say is that I said before...
I don't think that our names being in the book of life from the foundation of the world means that we have no free will. I don't believe that God knowing the future means that God predestined the future.
Kevin
Clete said:Well that's not what we are saying. God's foreknowledge does detroy freedom because it means that God predestined everything, it detroys freedom because it removes our ability to do or to do otherwise, which is the very definition of what means to have a free will.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Clete said:intro2faith,
It looks like you and Knight have got a pretty good start going on a terrific topic that seems to keep popping up around here lately. You guys are making some good progress and so I don't want to intrude but I thought that perhaps it would be helpful to define terms.
I know that Knight agrees, at least generally if not completely that to be free is defined as having the ability to do or to do otherwise and he is proceeding in his logic from this premise. Would you agree with this definition? If not, could you offer an alternative?
And there is one last thing I wanted to point out. It might seem like a pretty fine hair to split but it may become important later on.
You said...
Knight said that he had no argument with this and depending on what you mean by this, I may not either but if you mean by this that there is nothing unknowable to God then I do not agree and I don’t think Knight would either.
Speaking from a strictly logical perspective, something is either knowable or it is not. Just because I am unable to know something is not what makes something logically unknowable. Being unknowable means that it cannot be known at all; not by us or by God, or by anyone else. If anyone at all can know a thing then that thing is by definition knowable. So when we say that God does not know the unknowable we aren’t talking about stuff that is really difficult to figure out, we’re talking about stuff that CANNOT be figured out at all.
Resting in Him,
Clete
kmoney said:Clete,
This is going to be a very loose parallel, but.....
have you read any Nietzchse? specifically his idea of Eternal Recurrence? In short this is what ER is....we have lived our lives an infinite number of times before this life and an infinite number of times after this life. As far as his stance on free will vs. determinism he is in the middle. He is against the notion of complete free will, but he is also against what he calls "unfree will", which is the opposite of free will.
Anyway, if ER is true than one way you could look at it is that you are programmed to follow a specific path in this lifetime and can do nothing else because you are living a life that has been lived before. therefore you have no free will. Nietzsche, however, doesn't follow this belief. He doesn't take all free will away. The fact that this life is just one link on an infinite chain of lives has no consequence when it comes to you making choices. I know that can be hard to understand and can seem quite contradictory, but I don't believe it is.
Now, for the belief that God exhaustively knows the future....
I brought up Nietzsche's concept of ER for this reason....If God knows the future than it is as if you have lived it before as God forsaw your life. Yes, there is only one way to live your life because if God knows the future and that knowledge is perfect than there is only one path you can take, but I don't think you can take that and jump to not having free will.
Like I said, that parallel is not very great, but I threw it in here.
Kevin
Yep, I think that may be it! :BRAVO:nancy said:Aren't you guys simply confusing foreknowledge with predestination?
nancy said:Aren't you guys simply confusing foreknowledge with predestination?