Do we have freewill ? is it biblical ?

Discussion in 'Religion' started by zacariah88, Feb 22, 2023.

?

Do you believe you have freewill

  1. yes

    5 vote(s)
    45.5%
  2. no

    6 vote(s)
    54.5%
  1. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    The thing is the claim has been made that "god" does know the future. I.e. it's a given for this argument.
    If the future is known (i.e. the foreknowledge is infallibly true) then there is, and can be, no choice.
    We're all following (unkown to us) a pre-written script which only "god" has read.
    If "god" knows your choices then can you choose other than what "god" predicts?
    If yes then, by definition, he/ she/ it didn't know.
    If no then then there wasn't actually a choice.
     
    cluelusshusbund likes this.
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  3. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    But who said there's only one output? We have posited a multiverse where all outputs are possible and happen.

    You're dancing around the issue.


    Sorry, it just does not follow.
     
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  5. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    If God sees all universes in which we pick a flavour of ice cream then it does not constrain us. Like rolling a die - the fact that the results are predictable does not mean the die had any constraints on any given roll. Every single roll was a 1-in-6 chance.

    That is simply an argument that future knowledge is logically impossible.



    Just because you can make an argument that "I know what will happen means you have no choice" doesn't mean it must happen that way.

    Like hypothesizing the ramifications of time travel, you'll have to posit a mechanism by which it happens before you can state what effects are observed. You can't just hand wave it and say "... ergo you won't be capable of killing Hitler".

    And if the mechanism is simply "God magically sees all, therefore God can see the future", then the counter-mechanism is simply "God gave us free will, so God magically gifts it without constraint."
     
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  7. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    Not. Even. Close.
    If there's a chance (that the choice could be other than predicted) then it wasn't knowledge when the prediction was made.
    Maybe you missed the other option...
    Really?
    If I KNOW (i.e. my prediction is true) then you cannot choose otherwise.
    You keep missing the other half of the argument I gave.
    If "god" does know then free will is an illusion. The two are logically incompatible.
     
  8. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    So then how can God know it?
    It's simply an argument that aforeknowledge is logically impossible.
    Unless you can posit a mechanism by which the person/die is physically constrained.


    You KNOW Schrodinger's cat dies. You predicted its death, and lo! it did occur. But that does not mean it cannot also live. The cat can die and live. It is not constrained to one or 'other.
     
  9. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    While we're at it: God is all-powerful. Therefore he can make a rock so heavy even he cannot lift it.

    But is that actually true? Just because I can state it logically to be true, doesn't mean it constrains the universe or God.

    You cannot draw sweeping, categorical conclusions about phenomena for which the mechanisms are unknown. Therefore it does not follow that God's aforeknowledge actually constrains free will. The answer is undefined.
     
  10. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    19,252
    One more time: that's a given for the argument.
    Why do you persist in ignoring the rest of my post. I'll try again:
    If "god" knows your choices then can you choose other than what "god" predicts?
    If yes then, by definition, he/ she/ it didn't know.
    If no then then there wasn't actually a choice.

    It's an either/ or.
    The "mechanism" is that IF infallible foreknowledge is possible/ given the the future is fixed. There are no choices.
    Then my prediction was merely an informed guess, not knowledge.
    The claim made is that "god" knows.
     
  11. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    I'm not. You are stuck in black and white, and this is not a black and white issue*.

    (To be clear: you cannot say what colour it is (i.e. the mechanism), therefore any argument you make about it being black or white is unfounded.)

    No. You predicted the cat died.
    It did.

    The existence of a multiverse means that the cat was not constrained only to die. It also lived.
    You had aforeknowledge of the cat's death, and yet that did not mean the cat did not live. They are not mutually exclusive.
    And yes, you can also have aforeknowledge that it lived. And that still doesn't constrain its live/die fate. It did all possible things.


    Don't forget, this is just one spurious way out of the trap. There could be many; you just don't know. Therefore, you can't state categorically that the issue is only black without first having a working model of the mechanism by which it works.
     
  12. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    19,252
    Yeah right. Where's the supporting argument, or am I just supposed to take your word?
    Really?
    Then - as you have stated - my prediction wasn't correct since the cat lived "elsewhere".
    This is like me calling "6" before rolling a die and then, utterly regardless of what it actually rolls, claiming I was right becuse somewhere in the multiverse it DID roll a six, but just where we are currently observing.
     
  13. mathman Valued Senior Member

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    2,002
    It still looks to me that there is no god.
     
  14. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    You are making a strong argument. That X cannot be true, no exceptions. The onus is on you to demonstrate there can be no exceptions.

    I am making a moderate argument. That X might be true, and without a working mechanism, there's no way no draw strong conclusions. My burden is way less than yours. And your case is not made. You have not shown that there are no exceptions.


    You predicted the cat died. It did.
    Those two facts are incontrovertible. We all agree these two things happened.


    No it isn't. Bad analogy.
     
  15. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    Of course.
    But this is a discussion that is premised with :"IF God exists"
     
  16. Dywyddyr Penguinaciously duckalicious. Valued Senior Member

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    19,252
    And yet all you're doing is making the claim. No supporting logic.
    And you also stated "But that does not mean it cannot also live. The cat can die and live. It is not constrained to one or 'other." So if it can live then my prediction could have been wrong. Therefore it wasn't knowledge.
    Another claim with no supporting logic.
     
  17. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,935
    False. I gave an example which we are discussing. The fact that you are not conceding the logic of my example does not mean I'm not supporting my claim.

    And the burden is still on you to show there are no exceptions to your handwaving claim. Until you can, your case is not made.

    It was knowledge. You predicted correctly. The cat died.

    I am not obliged to accept your analogy just because you post it.

    In truth, I am typing some of this on my phone, so I have to choose brevity. I might be able to make a longer argument later but frankly the burden is not mine. You have a harder case to make, and your logic so far just doesn't clinch it.
     
    Last edited: Mar 10, 2023
  18. Baldeee Valued Senior Member

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    2,226
    That is what I'm running with.
    The notion of an omniscient deity has also been posited, has it not?

    A predetermined (foreseen, or however you term it) means that there is only one possible outcome for each universe.
    Across the multiverse every outcome occurs.
    But in each individual universe, the fact that it is predetermined means that there can be, could never be, any other option.for that universe.
    Saying that, across the universes, all outcomes occur speaks nothing at all to an individual universe.

    If you want to claim that all possibilities are genuinely available in a single universe, as opposed to the overall multiverse, then that is an argument, or at least a property of the scenario, that you need to make.
    I'm addressing the issue as I see it.
    If it is not, from your view, addressing it then by all means explain, rather than just dismiss, please.

    From my view, having only a single path equates, at least for the incompatibilist, to constraint.
    If you could buy a car of any colour as long as it is black... etc.
    Such "constraint" is not just a perspective from the individual's point of view but from a meta perspective.
    From the "infinite" (although I suspect Tiassa's line is different than I initially suspected).

    One could look at "constraint" as being from the pov of the individual: if they don't perceive only having a single possible outcome then there is no such constraint.
    That would seem to be a compatibilist view.

    Predetermination (or omniscience etc), however, irrespective of mechanism, irrespective of how it is allowed or happens, means that the action could not be, could never have been, other than what it was.

    Wherever something is posited, the implications of what it means are also posited, even if one doesn't know the mechanism.

    So I ask again: in what way do you think that having but one genuine path is not a constraint, even if the individual is not aware of the constraint?
    It does, for reasons given.
    If you want a discussion, though, offer something more than just a dismissal, please.
    Thanks.
     
  19. Baldeee Valued Senior Member

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    Omniscience would mean knowledge of what transpired in a specific universe, as well as the multiverse as a whole.
    So claims of what might also have transpired in one of the other dimensions as if it has a bearing on the knowledge of what transpires in this specific universe is a red herring.
    I.e. only what transpires in this universe is relevant.
    And only one possible outcome is possible in this universe due to that omniscience.
    If the omniscient being didn't know which universe would have the dead cat and which would have the live cat, then is it an omniscient being?
    Across the multiverse all outcomes occur, but omniscience isn't just about knowing what occurs at a multiverse level, but at specific universe level.
    So your argument seems to be lacking, unfortunately.
     
  20. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,935
    But who says each one is predetermined?

    And who says there is only one universe per option?

    6000 universes, each rolling a fair die will produce a predictable outcome, but that does not constrain any given die in any given universe.
     
  21. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,935
    Only because you keep moving the goalposts of what was initially simply "knowing what will happen".

    I ask again: if God knows what my action will be, what mechanism do *you* posit actually constrains my action?
     
  22. Baldeee Valued Senior Member

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    2,226
    Omniscience does constrain it, though.
    And we have, have we not, posited an omniscient deity here?
    If not, then we can fall back on determinism itself, and if not there then to the random (within a probability function) nature of our currently understood universe.
     
  23. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    How, exactly? What mechanism? Even in principle?

    I have to stop, as my thumbs are old and decrepit. Do not take my temporary silence as concession.
     

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