elman said:
I can choose anything I want. That is what choice means. Whatever choice I make that is the choice that God knew I would make.
Here is a simple hypothetical question for you, first let me set the scenario:
In the future, person X will be born and at the age of 48 person X will choose to move to Australia with his family to take up a job offer.
This will all happen in the future, let's say in 100 years time.
God has always know this person's life would play out this way, god has always know this person would choose to move to Australia.
.... now let's fast forward 100 years, it is the day before person X must make his big choice, these are the choices he faces:
A: Stay put and take the job promotion offered by his boss.
B: Take the job offer in Australia and move there with his family.
C Take the job offer near his parents house in Scotland.
Now bear in mind that for all intents and purposes we, just like the Christian diety, have inerrant foreknowledge, we know the outcome will be choice
B.
Now for my question:
Can person X choose option A or option C ?
elman said:
It may 'feel' that way, but an omniscient diety negates freewill and foreknowledge negates choice.
Is is simply the illusion of freewill.