Apples and oranges then. your omnipotent God knows the future, it's future, your analogy asks me to look at the past and it doesn't mean a jot to the argument of whether a god who knows X for all times can potentially do YMissing the definition.
We know Caesar didn't put Seneca to death. Our "science" of this fact is simply assured.
The only question now is whether Caesar were able.
I assert Caesar was completely able, and thus potent to kill Seneca.
So, we are scient of the fact that Caesar did not kill Seneca. And yet we also know Caesar was entirely potent to kill Seneca, and yet he did not.
What's more, we can conclude that Caesar was in his right mind, and could afterward reflect on the fact that he spared Seneca's life. Caesar himself was scient of not killing Seneca, but Caesar was potent to kill Seneca, and yet he did not.
Last edited:
Upvote
0