You didn't give an example of how this works. I think you're possibly being very disingenuous with how you perceive choice. If you give your child a choice between eating cookies or dog mess, I'd say you haven't really left them a choice. So please, give an example so we can see how you think this can work.Nobody manipulates chance --not even God. There is no such thing as chance: chance is only a "placeholder for 'I don't know.'" (Voltaire). I am not God-- nor can I, like him, be absolutely sure what my child will choose. I only gave the example to show that two can make the one choice.
If everything is predestined, by definition we have no choice. There can be an appearance of choice, but it's just an illusion.God can choose, and predestine, and know absolutely that what he chose will happen, because God is First Cause, all other causes are effects.
And....? I have no idea what point this is supposed to be making.One always chooses the option available to them that they want to (And don't start arguing that point. In the end it is true, what they choose is what seems best to them at the moment. Even if the decision was careless, flippant, or nearly equal with other options, it is still what one wants to decide, that they decide.
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