GeeMack
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2007
- Messages
- 7,235
Correct, the clarification was intended to avoid faulty analysis, based on an incomplete definition, of the following:
You can place the omniscient being at only one place in time, without any movement through time whatsoever (no time travel), and the omniscient being still knows everything from all time.
In 1902, before you were born, the magical omniscient being knew you were going to have chicken soup for lunch tomorrow. When you wake up tomorrow morning you can hem and haw all you like, waver between grilled cheese sandwiches and chicken soup for hours, until it hurts your head, and you will still have chicken soup for lunch. Otherwise your magical omniscient being isn't omniscient. So your illusion of choice wasn't actually a choice, was it?
My argument still holds and you will now have to invent a new argument to counter it.
Your argument, if you can call that misuse of the English language and dishonest redefinition of terms an argument, still results in failure.