Mark Quayle said:
No. God has true spontaneity. His is the ONLY truly NEW.
Maybe. But thats a statement of faith, and not something we can reason toward, imo.
I'm not sure I can say it is without faith that I conceive of it. But it is altogether reasonable, if not entirely logical: God, if he is God, is first cause. Given first cause, then, all other things are caused by him.
Mark Quayle said:
But it's ok to call his actions an effect of his will. I just don't think that the way we think of that is quite accurate. But I don't know how better to say it without writing a dissertation.
No, I'm not talking about mystery. If humans have TRUE spontaneity, their 'spontaneous' acts are uncaused —which renders them little first causes, when there can be only one first cause: God.
If I were a believer I think Id have to conclude that God endowed us with some genuine creative capacity - but within a lot of guardrails that God himself isnt subject to.
I can understand that as an empirical view. But it is a very limited view, not only temporal, but entirely human. I believe it was Hume, I heard of last night on YouTube, who said that the fact we see natural causes, such as the chain of causes or events of cue-stick moving, striking the white pool ball striking the next, that ball rolling into the pocket, etc, is only empirical, and so taken for granted as causal. (He didn't, btw, as some claim, prove that causation was not valid, but that what WE see as the cause, is not necessarily the cause.)
Anyhow, the fact that we think WE came up with this or that, and even call it creation, doesn't mean it is. The Law of Causation states that all effects are caused, (first cause not being an effect). So IF the Law of Causation is valid, and IF there is a first cause, and IF all things except first cause are effects, (all three points of which, I think, are valid and logical), our 'creativity' is also caused, and that, in every particular.
There was once a cult or religion that posited the notion that in fact, what we consider natural causation, was 'the gods' watching to see what we thought, and producing that as an empirical effect. In one of my theological guesses, a 'conclusion' apparent from certain things I have learned of God's nature —to wit, his 'Immanence', and that he (or, rather, something about him) is the very essence of matter and energy/force— suggests that what we consider natural is also entirely 'supernatural'. (The notion is very satisfying to me, explaining, for example, his universal love, in spite of the fact of his particular attentions; also explaining, for example, the power of his will. It also explains a lot, concerning morality —for example, the horror of rebellion against him.)
Anyhow, fun thoughts.