Albion
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- Dec 8, 2004
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Alright, I asked it before. For those arguing we don't have free will, what would free will look like?
For us to conclude that all men have real free will, it would be necessary for them to all correctly and fully understand every choice they face and freely select one. If there is ANY limitation on their awareness, it isn't free will. They may indeed still have the right and ability to choose between alternatives, but without perfect knowledge, you can't say free will is in operation. For instance, let's say you are going to buy a used car. You choose the Honda instead of the Buick.
Did you exercise choice? Sure. Did you know everything about each of them, such that you could say you went into the process with you "eyes open?" If you didn't know that the Honda had many more miles on it than the odometer read, you didn't have free will. You were, in fact, deceived, even though you took the Honda over the Buick. Your freedom was short circuited, although you didn't realize it.
So also with Man choosing God or making moral decisions. He makes a choice, but unless you can honestly show that he has all the cards in front of him--and understands them perfectly--it's not an exercise of free will. It's just 'three-card monte.' And if we all had such clarity, we'd have no difficulty agreeing 100% on abortion, gay marriage, etc. But we don't agree, do we?
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