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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Ethics & Morality
How is free will possible?
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<blockquote data-quote="Uber Genius" data-source="post: 73345555" data-attributes="member: 389967"><p>So yes it is possible for humans to delude themselves no doubt, but that is true of every knowledge category. So I don't think that gets us anywhere.</p><p></p><p>So my point would be that is very difficult to read any scripture in any book OT or NT, without hundreds of implicit clues that require the reader to have libertarian free will. Every comment on this thread required people to use their intent to recall memories, choose freely to study philosophical notions of free will, using rationality freely decide which position, libertarian, compatibilism, or determinism, best explains their experience of the world and in some cases their understanding of the scriptures. So none of these appear to me to be determined.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Uber Genius, post: 73345555, member: 389967"] So yes it is possible for humans to delude themselves no doubt, but that is true of every knowledge category. So I don't think that gets us anywhere. So my point would be that is very difficult to read any scripture in any book OT or NT, without hundreds of implicit clues that require the reader to have libertarian free will. Every comment on this thread required people to use their intent to recall memories, choose freely to study philosophical notions of free will, using rationality freely decide which position, libertarian, compatibilism, or determinism, best explains their experience of the world and in some cases their understanding of the scriptures. So none of these appear to me to be determined. [/QUOTE]
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