HuntingMan
Well-Known Member
Thanks WC, for being civil in your post. 
Yes, you 'can' pick B if you so chose to. The Being would simply know the outcome, not having to actually play any part in that decision.
With what I believed was being presented in your title here, I can completely agree.
Without true free will there is no true omniscience...only a controlled outcome...
It doesnt take being infinitely knowing just to manipulate the outcome...it simply takes the ability to control it.
I assumed that we were discussing whether the omniscient being was controlling or not based on his foreknowledge.
That isnt the case?
I would disagree entirely with 'solely' there.
If free will doesnt exist, and this Being does, it could hardly be determined whether probability was the cause for any particular event, or if the outcome was being 'controlled' by this Being.
If God exists as I believe and we remove free will from the mix, it would seem more likely that the hypercalvinist is correct and every single aspect and detail of creation is controlled down to the direction of every wind.
Are we discussing determining probabilities or is this about omniscience which is hardly the same?
Im not one who believes that God 'predicts'...that would be what Satan and his angels would do, lacking omniscience themselves.
But if this Being is micromanaging every detail there is no need for omniscience as far as knowing future events.
This is an issue I see from some and I think it stems from many peoples mistaken view that all Christians might be Calvinists of some sort and that absolute control is what God is all about.Agreed. Control is not the issue.
Thats the point.I am confused. From my point of view, can I choose to pick box B? The alleged-omniscient predicts box A (but hasn't told me as such), but can I choose box B if I so wish?
Yes, you 'can' pick B if you so chose to. The Being would simply know the outcome, not having to actually play any part in that decision.
The concept that I believed was present in the title before I actually came into the thread was quite thought provoking, honestly, as I explained in my first post.I don't see how. I set up a thought experiment highlighting the logical contradiction that arises when one assume true omniscience and true free will to simultaneously exist.
That is, I explained why a true omniscient cannot coexist with true free will. The thread title seems apt.
With what I believed was being presented in your title here, I can completely agree.
Without true free will there is no true omniscience...only a controlled outcome...
It doesnt take being infinitely knowing just to manipulate the outcome...it simply takes the ability to control it.
We're on completely different pages here...most likely not even reading the same book.I disagree. If free will doesn't exist, then the outcome of a trial is determined soley by mathematical laws.
I assumed that we were discussing whether the omniscient being was controlling or not based on his foreknowledge.
That isnt the case?
I would disagree entirely with 'solely' there.
If free will doesnt exist, and this Being does, it could hardly be determined whether probability was the cause for any particular event, or if the outcome was being 'controlled' by this Being.
If God exists as I believe and we remove free will from the mix, it would seem more likely that the hypercalvinist is correct and every single aspect and detail of creation is controlled down to the direction of every wind.
Now, this isnt really fair of you to pull a bait and switch on me here, poster.Given these laws and sufficient information about the present, even non-omniscients could predict the future.
Are we discussing determining probabilities or is this about omniscience which is hardly the same?
Im not one who believes that God 'predicts'...that would be what Satan and his angels would do, lacking omniscience themselves.
I would agree that the being 'can' manipulate and still be omniscient, yes.Equivocation. An omniscient entity that interferes with reality is still omniscient.
But if this Being is micromanaging every detail there is no need for omniscience as far as knowing future events.
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