My proof that an omniscient God makes choice impossible:
Ahhhh...finally, an ultimatum....
A choice is a selection from more than one possible option. (not disputed by Mestemia)
Yes. Yes it is.
God knows everything including every action every human being will ever take (not disputed by Mestemia)
I don't like the word "
will", insinuative of precognition, which has been successfully refuted, yet he has the knowledge of every action a human
takes, for he is the agent that observes, distributed in his omnipresent manifestations across space/time, rendering perspectively the single, instantaneous observation. There is no moment of
precognition, yet a distributed observance....he observes you in moment A contemplating X, Y, and Z; in moment B, enacting X; and moment C as you are effected by your rationale, X, measuring the distance from himself.
In any given situation, you will either do what God knew you would do or you will not (not disputed by Mestemia)
The same. Do not try to apply time-oriented verbs to God's observances. Look to my reply above.
It is not possible for anyone to do something that did not already know they would do (actually affirmed by Mestemia in an earlier post)
"that did not already" (sic.) That what? God? You apply again, a syntactical flaw,
would. God
knows everything (hence the omni).....yet does not broach upon free will because he doesn't stem his conciousness from the past, rather outside of time itself...thus, he kneows (knew and knows combined, another neologism).
That is the flaw in your argument.In fact, that is the
premise of your argument. The perception of time by human occupants, is ludricious...I sit down in a room. Three screens are buzzing in front of me. The first screen shows a biker riding down a path to a fork in the road, the second shows the biker on 2nd option of the fork, and the last shows him putting away his bicycle. I observed all of them, while a narrator (Morgan Freeman) narrated the cyclist's thoughts above me. Does that negate the bikers free will? Because I kneow what he was/is/already did before he knew himself? No. In fact, the mortal encased in the "flow" or "circumnavigation" of time, his perception is not a contributing factor, because of the opposite disposition towards time, expressed by God....the one constructing a barrier towards the cogitation, must be the factor, otherwise, it would be left to the perceiver to construct his own barrier out of nothing.
Thus, in any given situation, there is only one thing any person can do which, by definition, means that choice can never occur (disputed by Mestemia with no reason given)
I'm not Mestemia. I refuted this above.
If you do not dispute 1-4, how then can you dispute 5?
I just did.