Bill Thompson 75
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2010
- Messages
- 1,437
Your first logical impossibility was based on performing contradictory actions.Okay, thanks for clarifying your argument. I've focused on the point of divergence that you've identified.
But by the same reasoning, you must hold that it is possible today that I could draw a square triangle tomorrow, because the possibility itself is not an action that creates a logical contradiction.
In other words, the possibility of the impossible is possible.
I can accept that the existence of the OB would allow the possibility of free will, where that possibility is equivalent in nature to the possibility of drawing a square triangle. To me that's the same as no free will at all, but that's where you might differ.
Respectfully,
Myriad
I showed that free will is based on possible options, not the action that may follow from selecting one of those options.
Your argument here is the logical impossibility of combining incompatible definitions.
The definitions of free will and omniscience, without analysis, do not present an incompatibility.
That analysis has been attempted but I have shown that there is an exception to that analysis.
Your logical impossibility argument was an attempt to to defeat my exception, but it failed, as I demonstrated in a prior post, where I noted that:
"Your argument confuses two ideas.
1) The logical impossibility of a choice other than the one that is made
2) The logical impossibility of multiple options before choice is made"
Your argument is that 1) is true, but my argument is that 2) is false.
My argument has not been successfully refuted in this thread.