You turned it into a comedy my friend with your latest claim tonight.
I know very well if I'm fooling myself. You should be worried believing in splitting moon and flying to heavens with buraq...
Law and Shipping law in City University London and half course in Christian Bible studies (out of curiosity) which I stopped because I became an agnostic.
Of course I can. I could follow, hire a private investigator or place a camera on someone and will know all his choices immediately.
Hooray! I'm omniscient for this particular person!! :laughing::laughing:
Honestly, the discussion has turned into a comedy now...
:laughing::laughing::laughing: That's exactly what we have been saying to you. Either God is not omniscient, or we don't have free will.
If we make a choice and then God knows what choice we made, I could easily do the same...:laughing::laughing:
You are unbelievable!!:laughing:
I have no problem discussing with anyone as long as they use logic. Unfortunately for many theists and especially Muslims logic is denied in their countries, otherwise it is punishable. You are lucky you live in England.
:laughing::laughing::laughing: That's not omniscience, that's BS.. I...
I wonder if it is only me that find this quote extremely nonsensical.
I asked you before but you didn't reply. Can you explain please with example what you mean and how can this be possible?
That is, how can we can choose something different from what God knew we will choose and that something...
Well, the Exodus specifically states that the children of Israel wandered in Sinai for 40 years. If you dismiss this, you may as well dismiss the whole Exodus.
So, what's wrong with that? Aren't you looking for the nearest possible truth?
Whether you believe or not it's irrelevant. The world doesn't give a damn about your personal beliefs.
In this particular discussion, although I'm not theist, I take as standard value what the Christian theology teaches. I'm not concerned with Islam or any other religion.
You said above that...
Read again please...with your glasses on this time.:)
"In the el-Amarna letters, which are dated a century before, we are told that a unit of fifty Egyptian soldiers was big enough to pacify unrest in Canaan."
Did I mention Israel anywhere?
No I haven't read them, but I believe that a team of...
I gave you the reasons 3-4 times and you never managed to say anything; instead you switched back to you old time-fallacy which is debunked even in the link you gave me. I 'm not going to waste any more time with you.
I will give you later the reasons why free will is an illusion.
I explained to you many times quite categorically that modal logic can not apply to your God and you never managed to debunk it.
To be honest, I'm now bored to read the same guesses from you, going backwards and forward all the time. Have a good time:)
The border between Canaan and Egypt was closely controlled. If a great mass of fleeing Israelites had passed through the border fortifications of the pharaonic regime, a record should exist. Yet in the abundant Egyptian sources describing the time of the New Kingdom in general and the thirteenth...
Well, now that you saw your modal logic/fallacy collapse, you are back on your old guesswork of time...:laughing:
From your link...
"Historically, some theologians have tried to solve the puzzle by invoking unique properties of God. For example, some have argued that God is ‘outside of time’...
I'm on topic..I explained to you zillion times that modal logic is based on contingents which do not and can not apply to God. God's infallibility and omniscience are not possibly true and possibly false.
God's knowledge according to theology is infallible, exists before the "creation" and can...
Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman, after analyzing in depth with powerful evidence the emergence of the first Israelites, conclude:
The process that we describe here is, in fact, the opposite of what we have in the Bible: the emergence of early Israel was an outcome of the collapse of...
The conclusion that the Exodus did not happen at the time and in the manner described in the Bible seems irrefutable when we examine the evidence at specific sites where the children of Israel were said to have camped for extended periods during their wandering in the desert (Nurnbers 33) and...
And from where do we get this information about huge numbers of Israelites coming to Canaan?
Because most scholars believe that Israelites lived with Canaanites all along.
Are there any extrabiblical references for your claim?