Nimos
Well-Known Member
Don't worry, the post is not running anywhereFirst, allow me to apologize for taking so long to respond to this post. I did not forget you, I was just busy, and I wanted to give your post the attention it deserves.
And im saying that it can not be used as an argument for whether or not we have free will. I understand this is what you believe. But it is like me saying that we don't have free will, because the Aliens won't allow it, they have this device on their planet aimed at Earth and it manipulates our minds. And as long as it does that, we don't have free will.The reason that Messengers of God can sometimes foresee events of the future IS because they are informed by God.
To be clear, I am not saying that they could do this because of time and space being collapsed....
The reason that Messengers KNOW that in the spiritual realm, time and space are collapsed such that all events are knowable such that it is possible to see the end in the beginning is because they were informed by God of these things.
You see how that is not an argument, it is just me believing in Aliens which I haven't demonstrated, yet apparently, I know a whole lot about what they can and can't do. Fair enough if this was what I believed, but it isn't an argument worth anything when it comes to free will. That is my issue with what he is writing.
Following from above, do you see the issue here? It is irrelevant in regard to free will. Again I understand that this is what you believe, but you need to present an argument for why free will would be possible in the first place if God is said to know everything. And you don't even have to include God, you just have to make an argument about how it would be possible if anyone/anything know?As I said above, that person said "we still are subject to random and contingent elements and have free will and the ability to alter the course of certain events in time." That means that some things that happen are random and some things are chosen with free will.
For instance, in another thread about free will, I made the argument that maybe free will could exist, if it is an emergent property, obviously this is speculative.
But my argument goes, that you could compare it to a house. Where bricks (atoms) might be deterministic, however, when put together into a specific pattern a house emerges, which has a lot of properties that bricks don't. A house offers security, shelter, space etc. And from a house other things can emerge such as heating it, cooling it, you can paint it etc. None of these properties exist within an atom. Which allows for atoms to be deterministic, whereas the emergent properties might not.
However, this argument wouldn't work in your case, because if God knows, then he also knows that the bricks will become a house and all the properties that come with it.
But you see the difference in why mine is an argument for the potential of free will? (Obviously, I might be wrong and not even convinced that it is true myself )
The reason it is a valid argument is because it takes things we know into account. We know atoms follow physical laws and we know that properties can emerge.
But this is what I mean by jumping to conclusions if the whole Universe is deterministic and known by God, then nothing is random. That is what we are trying to figure out.In short, we are not in control of anything that happens at random, like me getting hit by a car while riding my bike.
Exactly, God might be the only exception. And only to a certain degree, when it comes to his lack of creation.The universe was caused by God but God is not subject to cause and effect since God does not exist on this material realm of existence where everything is cause and effect. God is like an onlooker seeing what humans are doing in this contingent realm of existence, where everything is contingent upon a prior cause.
If prayers work then they might be the direct cause of God answering it. God probably wouldn't answer a non-prayer, that would be rather odd
The insect died because there was no other option. Obviously, the ball hitting it was the cause of its death, but it is irrelevant when there is no other option.The insect in the above example will die, but not because God knew it would die. It will die because the ball hit the insect. Ttat is back to cause and effect.
How could the insect have avoided getting hit by the ball?
So how do you tell the difference between something being contingent and predestined?But the ball does not have to kill the insect. Everything in this contingent world is subject to change at any moment in time (unless it was irrevocable fated/predestined by God, but that is another subject.)