In other words you just posted random nonsense.
The kind of hatred you have is what I avoid in people in real life.
We walk on a razor edge, a double edge sword, damned if you do and damned if you don't.
In other words you just posted random nonsense.
No you did not; Remember in this scenario I'm god, I KNOW you're going to pick B no matter what because I can see the future events, Options A and C were never available to you at any point because no matter what you were going to choose B, Why? Because It's already happened.
By what mechanism does choice operate such that A, B or C is actually chosen?
At the moment there is only the assertion that A, B or C could be freely chosen. What does the "free" mechanism look like?
There are no failed prophecies in the Bible. If any prophesy did not come to pass it is either because God changed His mind, or you have misinterpreted the prophecy (of course this assumes that the Bible is True - all bets are off if it isn't!).
And I am not 'playing devil's advocate', but merely trying to stop the goalposts from being moved. I wish we could just stick with the entity that most people think of when we say 'God', and discuss His properties as presented in the Bible. Otherwise god becomes whatever you want Him to be, and any argument can be sidestepped by simply redefining Him.
I predict that there will be an eclipse of the Sun on the 13th of November 2012. That's not certain, but it is highly likely. I think it would be fair to say that Biblical predictions having a similar level of certainty can legitimately be called 'prophecy'.
Infinity doesn't always mean literally 'without end' - sometimes it is used rhetorically. Take your own statement above. There cannot be an infinitely large number of examples in the Bible, so you must mean something else by 'infinite' (perhaps 'so many that we cannot count them', or even just 'a really big number'?). Similarly, when a biblical passage says that God's wisdom is 'infinite', that doesn't mean that He knows an infinite number of things, including things which are impossible to know. For example, if God put true randomness into Quantum physics, then even He cannot tell whether Schrödinger's cat is alive or dead. That information simply does not exist.
God gave us Free Will, and that means that our decisions are 'by definition' unknowable to God in advance. Our decisions have a certain 'random' aspect to them, preventing God from perfectly predicting the future in minute detail. However, what He can do is intervene to make sure that certain predictions come to pass.
As an analogy, imagine that you write a computer game. You know exactly how each algorithm works, so you can perfectly predict the outcome of any game, and you can easily beat the computerized opponent. But that's too boring, so you add a random number generator which affects the opponent's decisions. You still have enough knowledge and power to win every time (by hacking if necessary) but you must modify your gameplay according to what decisions your opponent makes. If the computer opponent was 'aware' of your existence, do you think it would be justified in considering you to be 'omniscient'?
Even with that tiny bit of 'leeway' your definition is still far too strict. Nowhere in the Bible does it say that God has infinite knowledge of the future, only that He knows of certain events which will occur. This is partly due to the vast knowledge He has, and partly because He can cause those events to happen. When the Bible says God knows something will happen, it means it! And that is all it means.
The Bible doesn't say that God is a time-hopping multidimensional all-pervading force which has its eye on every wave and particle in the universe, but simply that we cannot presume to go against God and get away with it. He has a plan for us which will not be thwarted. He hopes that we will do the right thing. But the Bible also makes it clear that we must make the decision to follow or reject Him. God may have the power to know or do anything else, but He cannot make our minds up for us.
Certainly you could imagine a mathematically pure infinite 'omniscience', and then point to its incompatibility with Free Will. But that would be considering a theoretical 'god' which is not described in the Bible. If not being able to know things which are unknowable by definition prevents a deity from being omniscient then 'so be it', but that does not in any way reduce God's powers as described in the Bible. Perhaps if people stopped applying that strawman to God, they might begin to see the True message in the Bible.
Exactly. God has defined Free Will as being outside His sphere of influence. Therefore He can truly answer "I don't know" without compromising His omniscience, because a definite answer does not exist.
This is just another example of creating meaning where none was intended. Nowhere does the Bible say how God 'hardened Pharaoh's Heart' or even whether this was an overt action on God's part. There is no evidence that God reached into Pharaoh's mind and subverted his Free Will. In fact the Bible suggests that he did it to himself.
1 Samuel 6:6
Why do you harden your hearts as the Egyptians and Pharaoh did? When Israel’s god dealt harshly with them, did they not send the Israelites out so they could go on their way?
So what we have here is the Bible stating one thing, and people taking something else entirely out of it. God's omniscience is treated the same way by people who aim to subvert the Lord's message to suit thier own twisted agendas. The principle of a god who has mathematically perfect (and therefore paradoxical) omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence is not Biblical. It is a pagan idea that is at best irrelevant, and at worst turns the Biblical message on it's head (eg. Calvinism).
Fair enough. However I don't think that the impossibility of marrying 'Intrinsic Omniscience' and 'True Prophecy' to Free Will makes Yahweh into an impossible God. If the Bible is True, then He is as described therein. The problem is our insistence on having a mathematically pure model of God.
That's the problem. Although from the point of view of the person, he or she has made a decision, the reality is that he or she didn't because it was determined in advance. There was no Y or Z choice available.
It appears that way.
The Kingdom is within us, what is out there is for us.
What is within us is a different story. You have to look there to find what it is we are all looking for.
Why does the fact that it's already happened mean that I have no choice? Again, a logical syllogism would be great. I don't think these incompatibility arguments can really be atomized and formalized.
I am god, I know for a fact because I am god and nothing happens without my will that you are going to do X today.
Avalon, It already happened, Your decision is set in stone, I really don't think I nor anyone else (perhaps) can get you to understand this simple notion.
I am god, I know for a fact because I am god and nothing happens without my will that you are going to do X today. I have looked into the future three days from now and sure enough you did X just like I planed.
Now please tell me how is it you ever had any choices at all if for a fact you were going to do X no matter what.
Except that weathermen can be wrong. Weather can do unexpected things that aren't in the plan.Think of a weatherman. He predicts the weather, but he doesn't cause it. The weather does what it does regardless of the weatherman's predictions, but because the weatherman understands the laws of physics as they pertain to weather, he's able to accurately predict its outcome.
There are no failed prophecies in the Bible. If any prophesy did not come to pass it is either because God changed His mind, or you have misinterpreted the prophecy (of course this assumes that the Bible is True - all bets are off if it isn't!).
And I am not 'playing devil's advocate', but merely trying to stop the goalposts from being moved.
I wish we could just stick with the entity that most people think of when we say 'God',
and discuss His properties as presented in the Bible.
Otherwise god becomes whatever you want Him to be, and any argument can be sidestepped by simply redefining Him.
I predict that there will be an eclipse of the Sun on the 13th of November 2012. That's not certain, but it is highly likely. I think it would be fair to say that Biblical predictions having a similar level of certainty can legitimately be called 'prophecy'.
Infinity doesn't always mean literally 'without end' - sometimes it is used rhetorically. Take your own statement above. There cannot be an infinitely large number of examples in the Bible, so you must mean something else by 'infinite' (perhaps 'so many that we cannot count them', or even just 'a really big number'?). Similarly, when a biblical passage says that God's wisdom is 'infinite', that doesn't mean that He knows an infinite number of things, including things which are impossible to know. For example, if God put true randomness into Quantum physics, then even He cannot tell whether Schrödinger's cat is alive or dead. That information simply does not exist.
God gave us Free Will, and that means that our decisions are 'by definition' unknowable to God in advance.
Our decisions have a certain 'random' aspect to them, preventing God from perfectly predicting the future in minute detail. However, what He can do is intervene to make sure that certain predictions come to pass.
As an analogy, imagine that you write a computer game. You know exactly how each algorithm works, so you can perfectly predict the outcome of any game, and you can easily beat the computerized opponent. But that's too boring, so you add a random number generator which affects the opponent's decisions. You still have enough knowledge and power to win every time (by hacking if necessary) but you must modify your gameplay according to what decisions your opponent makes. If the computer opponent was 'aware' of your existence, do you think it would be justified in considering you to be 'omniscient'?
Even with that tiny bit of 'leeway' your definition is still far too strict. Nowhere in the Bible does it say that God has infinite knowledge of the future, only that He knows of certain events which will occur. This is partly due to the vast knowledge He has, and partly because He can cause those events to happen. When the Bible says God knows something will happen, it means it! And that is all it means.
The Bible doesn't say that God is a time-hopping multidimensional all-pervading force which has its eye on every wave and particle in the universe, but simply that we cannot presume to go against God and get away with it.
He has a plan for us which will not be thwarted.
He hopes that we will do the right thing. But the Bible also makes it clear that we must make the decision to follow or reject Him. God may have the power to know or do anything else, but He cannot make our minds up for us.
Certainly you could imagine a mathematically pure infinite 'omniscience', and then point to its incompatibility with Free Will.
But that would be considering a theoretical 'god' which is not described in the Bible.
If not being able to know things which are unknowable by definition prevents a deity from being omniscient then 'so be it', but that does not in any way reduce God's powers as described in the Bible.
Perhaps if people stopped applying that strawman to God, they might begin to see the True message in the Bible.
Exactly. God has defined Free Will as being outside His sphere of influence. Therefore He can truly answer "I don't know" without compromising His omniscience, because a definite answer does not exist.
This is just another example of creating meaning where none was intended. Nowhere does the Bible say how God 'hardened Pharaoh's Heart' or even whether this was an overt action on God's part. There is no evidence that God reached into Pharaoh's mind and subverted his Free Will. In fact the Bible suggests that he did it to himself.
1 Samuel 6:6
Why do you harden your hearts as the Egyptians and Pharaoh did? When Israel’s god dealt harshly with them, did they not send the Israelites out so they could go on their way?
So what we have here is the Bible stating one thing, and people taking something else entirely out of it. God's omniscience is treated the same way by people who aim to subvert the Lord's message to suit thier own twisted agendas.
The principle of a god who has mathematically perfect (and therefore paradoxical) omniscience, omnipotence and omnibenevolence is not Biblical.
It is a pagan idea that is at best irrelevant, and at worst turns the Biblical message on it's head (eg. Calvinism).
Fair enough. However I don't think that the impossibility of marrying 'Intrinsic Omniscience' and 'True Prophecy' to Free Will makes Yahweh into an impossible God. If the Bible is True, then He is as described therein. The problem is our insistence on having a mathematically pure model of God.
Except that weathermen can be wrong. Weather can do unexpected things that aren't in the plan.
Bad analogy.
I don't think Avalon has any problem understanding your simple notion. It is simple, it is easy to understand. You mistakenly think that the only possible reason he could disagree with you is that he doesn't understand you, and that's your mistake, not his.
You confuse "predicted" with "set in stone", and they're not at all the same thing.
When you say, "nothing happens without my will" you're introducing a new element to the discussion that wasn't there before. Knowing something will happen and willing it to happen are two different things. An omnipotent being could certainly force you to do whatever it wanted, but that's a different discussion. This discussion is about omniscience, not omnipotence.
Think of a weatherman. He predicts the weather, but he doesn't cause it. The weather does what it does regardless of the weatherman's predictions, but because the weatherman understands the laws of physics as they pertain to weather, he's able to accurately predict its outcome.
That's an imperfect analogy because the weather is not a conscious entity capable of decision making, but it works well as an example of something that behaves exactly the same regardless of the existence of something making predictions about it.
Another example would be a sports handicapper. That's someone who's paid to predict the outcome of sporting events (for the purpose of gambling), yet his predictions have nothing to do with the actual behavior of the individual members of the sports teams, all of whom are agents capable of free will.
So, what is your definition of free will that is immediately negated by any party's knowledge about the resulting choice?
Except that weathermen can be wrong. Weather can do unexpected things that aren't in the plan.
Bad analogy.
Predicting isn't omniscience.
Omniscience (play /ɒmˈnɪʃəns/;[1] omniscient point-of-view in writing) is the capacity to know everything infinitely, or at least everything that can be known about a character including thoughts, feelings, life and the universe, etc. In Latin, omnis means "all" and sciens means "knowing".
Okay, but if you go to that sort of extreme, don't you sort of wash out the moral implications of any action? If you believe in predetermination and ascribe God as the origin of all actions, that makes all of history the equivalent of playing out a movie.
No you did not; Remember in this scenario I'm god, I KNOW you're going to pick B no matter what because I can see the future events, Options A and C were never available to you at any point because no matter what you were going to choose B, Why? Because It's already happened.
In other words I me even giving you the option to choose was just me setting you up for a foregone conclusion.
The standard definition of an OB is an entity that knows everything at all times.So once again you have an OB that is not omniscient.