Combined reply to DFT_Dave, Lighthouse and Clete
To DFT_Dave]
Your questions demonstrate that you've paid no attention to what I have already said.
No, it's you who are not paying attention. In truth, your response demonstrates that you don't understand the content or significance of the questions that have been put to you. Isn't it true that the God of the Open View needs to wait for the future to happen before He knows it? If that is your assertion, then God doesn't know if His own "intrinsic" logic will continue to apply in the future. He has no way of knowing or investigating. He can only guess at best. He has no way of knowing if the rules of logic will continue to apply in the future. If you think He has some way of knowing, I'd like to hear it. To merely announce that logic is intrinsic to God's nature doesn't address the problem of the extrinsic application.
Logical laws are consistent and true within the Trinity as said earlier and need not be tested in the world by God in order to know if they are valid.
I agree, but the Open Theist cannot say this without contradicting his own espoused tenets. How does the God of the Open View know that the laws of logic need not be tested in the world? The God of the Settled View knows because He has decreed all things, past, present and future, in every meticulous detail, all according to His own good pleasure and His freely chosen and predetermined purposes.
God could not "do" what is illogical because he "is" not illogical in nature.
Are you saying that God is not free to be illogical if He wanted to be? Is God free to be evil if He wanted to be? I thought it was an Open View requirement that one must freely choose goodness in order to be truly good.
It's illogical to ask, is God free to do something illogical.
How do you know? On what basis do you determine what is or is not logical? Based on the claims of a God Who doesn't know if induction is going to hold in the future? Does God know whether modus ponens will hold true tomorrow? If so, how does He know? And how do you justify any claim to logic whatsoever?
Freedom has nothing to do with an illogical act.
Sure it does. Humans are illogical all the time. On the Settled View, God cannot be illogical. God is not free to be illogical. Just as God is not free to do evil. But on the Open View, God is free to be evil if He wanted to be. Why isn't God also free to be illogical if He wanted to be?
God is free to create the world or not. There is no such thing as the freedom to create and not create the world at the same time, which would be God doing what is illogical--not possible.
How do you know? Just because your experience doesn't include things being and not being simultaneously, how do you know it's not possible?
There's rational faith and there's irrational faith, mine is the former yours is the latter. I believe the resurrection will come because God has promised that it will come not because it already has happened.
How do you know you can trust God to keep His promise? Isn't God free to change His mind about that?
To Lighthouse:
How many times were prophets actually given visions of the future? And how many times were there prophetic warnings heeded, thus causing an outcome different than the one prophesied?
It doesn't matter if was one time or a thousand; you need to answer the question: Did God really show the prophets visions of the future? Or was it a simulation?
To Clete:
Hilston said:
This is the same argument atheists like to use, and it basically relegates all knowledge to radical skepticism.
There is no way for Hilston to know this either without utilizing the very thing he claims can't be processed.
On the contrary, we know because the God of the Settled View can attest to all cases of every law of logic, and affirms to us that logic is reliable. The God of The Open Open cannot make that affirmation because He simply does not know.
His every statement is in contradiction to the only premise he's clearly stated, including the stating of the premise itself. That statement being....
"... the notion of "rational" (i.e., of or pertaining to justified logic) depends upon exhaustive and universal experience, which only an infinite God -- unbounded by space or time -- has."
How is that a contradiction on any level?
So logic and reason depend on the existence of a irrational god.
Only in the mind of an Open Theist is reliance upon a fickle, ignorant God viewed as more rational than reliance upon an all-knowing, all-present God with exhaustive knowledge of all things, past, present and future.
Once again, the rest of his post isn't worthy of comment.
Once again, Clete has yet to demonstrate the wherewithal to ascertain what is or isn't worthy of comment.
And once again, Clete's "resting in Him" makes absolutely no sense with a God as fickle and as ignorant as that of the Open View.
Hilston