Mycroft
High Priest of Ed
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2003
- Messages
- 20,501
Do you know every decision she will make throughout her life?
Oh figure it out. Was I claiming to be omniscient? Or was I just giving an everyday example where my own knowledge, experience and wisdom allowed me to make a prediction that seemed amazing from the point of view of someone with less knowledge, experience and wisdom?
For the record, my daughter was amazed to find me waiting for her next to her car. "How did you know?" she asked. I shrugged, "I know everything. Now give me your keys."
Did I really know everything? Of course not, but at that time and place I knew everything that was important to know. Did my knowing she was going to make the decision she made change her free will? No. I was just able to anticipate how she would apply her free will.
I don't see the issue so much as a dilemma as much as a failure of imagination. It's easy to see how foreknowledge of one decision doesn't interfere with free will, but somehow it becomes difficult to understand when you apply the same principle to more decisions? That doesn't make sense.