The ultimate choice you're insisting a deity knew I would make all along of course, it's not rocket science.
It is quite obvious that you can't choose differently to what you choose
Another ludicrous ad vapid tautology, and no it is not obvious, you're claiming without any pretence of evidence here, as usual. However we are discussing a hypothetical consequence of your unevidenced claim.
I have said this before..People have no problem in seeing how the past is fixed, and that it is fixed by our choices...but when they consider a fixed future, somehow they perceive it as totally different...when in fact, it is not. They are both blocks of time. One is known, and one is unknown.As soon as one considers it to be known [ by a deity ], they seem to think that changes everything. It doesn't. It is purely our perception.
Your perception, not mine as you can't evidence any deity, and if your hypothetical was true, we would be left with no choice, just as we have no choice over the past.
It is true that we have to choose what G-d knows, but that does not limit our choice.
That's a contradiction.
"What God knows" is simply what we will choose. It can be anything.
Sophistry, as you have already said in your hypothetical a deity knows what we will choose before we choose it, ipso facto any other choice would be unavailable to us.
If you say "if G-d knows I will choose red", then that is why you will choose red .. not because you couldn't have chosen blue.
Semantics, it is axiomatic that if god knows beforehand which I choose, then the other choice was an illusion.
If you deem that it is impossible for G-d to know the future, and that the future cannot be known, then that is your opinion.
Straw man fallacy, again, please quote me making any such claim. You are still struggling with epistemological limits.
You are the one making unevidenced claims based on archaic superstition, all I am doing is disbelieving your claims as they are unsupported by any objective evidence.
However, Einsteinian physics suggests otherwise.
Nothing in Einstein's scientific work has validated or evidences any deity, again this is axiomatic. You might want to read what he had to say about the Abrahamic religions, he was pretty scathing, so I'm going to assume Einstein knew better than you what his work evidenced, and since he clearly didn't think the Abrahamic deity was anything but a "childish myth", your claim is pretty hilarious. How theists love to try and convert famous scientists after they've died. Or are you suggesting that you understand how Einstein's work remotely evidences anything in your religion, but he missed it?
Do you need the ad hominem and the smiley faces you keep using on me, or can we take it as read that I'm pointing and laughing at the claim?