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  #1  
Old 09-19-2005, 06:05 PM
Jacob_Gilliam Jacob_Gilliam is offline
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Default How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

If God is all knowing then he knows what were going to do. Therefore, free will doesn't exist. Or God isn't all knowing. How can it be both?
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  #2  
Old 09-19-2005, 06:36 PM
spaminator101 spaminator101 is offline
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

God lets us make decisions however he knows what we are going to do ahead of time. This does not however always happen.

Please note that this does not violate our free will. Because Humans are naturally inclined to sin we can not choose a Holy God on our own. God chose some,through His perfect and infalible will,to save. We then finish the process by choosing him.
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  #3  
Old 09-19-2005, 07:31 PM
DougShrapnel DougShrapnel is offline
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

This is a question that I always found interesting, but not compelling enough to disprove a all-knowing, all-powerful God. The reasoning in this proof is actually quite complex as it has more to do with quatum physics then general physics. The observation(all-knowing) effects the outcome(freewill in this case). However an all-powerful god can know the outcome without effecting it.
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  #4  
Old 09-19-2005, 07:50 PM
Jacob_Gilliam Jacob_Gilliam is offline
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

True, God can know the outcome without affecting it, but if he does know what is going to happen, then it is predestined to happen, even if he does nothing to help or hinder the process.
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  #5  
Old 09-19-2005, 07:55 PM
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

[ QUOTE ]
The reasoning in this proof is actually quite complex as it has more to do with quatum physics then general physics.

[/ QUOTE ]
I have a degree in physics. Please explain this to me.
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  #6  
Old 09-19-2005, 08:23 PM
David Sklansky David Sklansky is offline
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Default THE ANSWER

It is not necessary to argue over whether someone's knowledge of the future means you have no free will.

It is only necessary to argue whether you could have free will if that prescient being TELLS YOU AHEAD OF TIME about the future, including yours. Clearly if he does, and you can't prove him wrong, then you have no free will.

Taking this further we can thus state that if YOU had perfect knowledge of the future then you don't have free will. Because you are perpetually telling yourself about the future and are unable to disobey it. This is a tautology.

This means that if there is a God that will interact with humans in any way, he can't know the future unless he gives up his OWN FREE WILL. See why? Suppose he knows that he will part the Red Sea? If he is infallible in this ability, he can't change his mind.

What we have here, at least as far as religious people are concerned, is a situation very much like the question of whether God can form the word "dog" from the letters in "cat" or whether he can come up with a cube that is the sum of two other cubes, or whether he can build a rock he can't lift. Just because God can't do those things does not detract from him and most religious scholars agree. Even Not Ready does. Thus there should not be a lot of effort in trying to refute my argument (which I have never seen before and I'm wondering if it is original with me) that God can't simultaneously interact with people, know the future of people, and have his own free will. Just like the rock he can't build. Since something has to give, I would assume that religious people would choose it to be his ability to see the future.

The fact is that from what I can see, most religious people should not resist the notion that God can't see the future. They seem to have held on to thinking he can merely to give his omniscience due. But if you take away this power from him( like Skalnskyanity does), with the realization that it is nothing more than taking away his power to make something like 3+3 = 7, it actually helps make many religious precepts acceptable. Many of the non believer's arguments now go away. Think about it.
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  #7  
Old 09-19-2005, 09:20 PM
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Default Re: THE ANSWER

I think you're complicating the issue immensely. The answer to the original question is obvious.

[ QUOTE ]
This means that if there is a God that will interact with humans in any way, he can't know the future unless he gives up his OWN FREE WILL. See why? Suppose he knows that he will part the Red Sea? If he is infallible in this ability, he can't change his mind.

[/ QUOTE ]
I dont' follow this logic. A perfect being can choose all of his possible actions beforehand, assuming the universe is deterministic and there are no other free will agents. In fact, this is exactly what I'd expect a perfect being to do.
If there are free will agents, you're just restating the original question. I fail to see how this point adds anything.

[ QUOTE ]
But if you take away this power from him...it actually helps make many religious precepts acceptable

[/ QUOTE ]Depends greatly on the religion. If you combine this idea with an acceptance of evolution and the historical record of the earth/universe , then the whole idea of God creating this universe for people (or people being somehow special to God) becomes utterly absurd. As does the concept of Jesus dying to save our sins. I hardly see how this is making religious precepts more acceptable, unless you're talking about Buddhism.

Also, if you remove God's omniscience, you come up with the nasty little idea that God doesn't fully know what the consequences of his actions are.
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  #8  
Old 09-19-2005, 09:42 PM
Piers Piers is offline
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

[ QUOTE ]
If God is all knowing then he knows what were going to do. Therefore, free will doesn't exist. Or God isn't all knowing. How can it be both?

[/ QUOTE ]

There is no problme if logic breaks down when applied to God.
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  #9  
Old 09-20-2005, 02:24 AM
DougShrapnel DougShrapnel is offline
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

[ QUOTE ]
True, God can know the outcome without affecting it then it is predestined to happen, even if he does nothing to help or hinder the process

[/ QUOTE ] Time is a consequence of our universe and should not be applied, hence predistination also does not apply in this situation. Unless, of cource His obsreravation effects the outcome.
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  #10  
Old 09-20-2005, 02:32 AM
DougShrapnel DougShrapnel is offline
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Default Re: How can God be all knowing and we still have free will?

I usually agree with the conclusions you reach, and I don't have a degree in physics, or any degree for that matter. I know the dumbed down version of quatum mechanics, from feymans geometrical proofs. So you will have to grant me slack where I am lacking. But basically the observation of a entangled photon will actually effect the other entangled photon. Thus His observation would effect the choice you will make in the future.
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