elopez
Well-Known Member
You must have missed this post to Simon Templar:Okay, I must be reading the newadvent.org link wrong, because I'm seeing determinism in both traditions.
Can someone identify the point where the whole "free" part of free will comes in at? It seems God controls my life still by deciding what divine influences He will throw at me at specific times.
Determinism should not be the default position as there is still the logical option of free will co - existing with determinism, which is called compatibilism and is embraced by many Christians.
What do you mean everything is against determinism? Actually, everything is for it. I am talking of course about the omniscience of God, which is to have knowledge of all - things including the future happenings of mankind. That said what God foreknows of prior to creation is going to happen no matter what; there is nothing that can change that course of known outcomes. That is closely related to logical determinism, which is the view that all propositions about the future are either true or false. We don't know however what propositions are true for tomorrow, the next day, and so on, so we must wait to see if it will happen or make it happen ourselves. That is where free will is relevant to logical determinism: those propositions that God foreknows which are true are not realized by us, and so we tend to think and evaluate our choices and the possible effects.
Then there is casual determinism. That is widely supported by the idea of God. Future happenings occur because of past factors or other past happenings. Like, me responding to you now is happening because I came to the website, and I came to the website because I turned the computer on, etc. The trace of that and all of humanity is attributed to the very first act which was God creating. There is still free will in casual determinism as what we do in the future that is determined is nevertheless what we desire to do, it is how we want to act based on the evaluation of the effects in our mind. As long as nothing is forcing us to act against our will, or preventing us from acting how we want to, we have free will.
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