Yes, Arty, it does, for the reasons outlined above.
It's because God infallibly knows it that you cannot do otherwise, Arty. That's not free will at that point.
Saying it doesn't make it so, Arty, and I and Clete have CLEARLY outlined the line of reasoning that NECESSITATES that if God infallibly knows T, then !T is impossible. You're welcome to try to disprove it, but so far, all you've done is whine and complain and project upon us that we're "conflating foreknowledge with some sort of influence."
Where in our line of reasoning Is that the case, Arty? You won't give specifics.
It's as simple as we've outlined.
By definition, a settled future does NOT allow for free will.
By definition, Arty. Not just because we say so. And we have explained why.
What you're doing is conflating what we're arguing against with predestination, by calling it "manipulation by God."
Liar.
No one said you were.
You were arguing that what we were saying about infallible foreknowledge was that it was "manipulation by God." That's not our position.
Again, we don't have the frame of reference to fully comprehend how long God has existed, but that does NOT mean that we can't understand that He has, in fact, existed forever.
Nope. Sorry. It doesn't. "Time" isn't a law that He created.
There's that "subjective objectivity" again.
Again: Logic IS.
God is the source of logic. He is reason itself.
God says "Come, let us reason together," and he communicates with us in a way we CAN understand.
Our understanding of "rational" comes from Him.
No one said it couldn't. The problem is that the meaning is literally given in the very next verse!
God is patient and capable. That's literally all it's saying.
And you seem to be ignoring the fact that the word "as" is used throughout.
Then you need to get your head checked, because things that are irrational should not seem rational to you.
"Outside of time" is an irrational concept. That's not me saying that. It is by definition irrational.
And Scripture doesn't allow for it anyways. God has a past, exists in the present, and looks forward to the future.
That's what scripture says.
The fact of the matter is that the note you hear in one octave is, in fact, a different frequency than the one you hear in another octave. Things that are different are not the same.
You realize that I wasn't saying that "A" an octave higher than another "A" should be called "H," right? Because that would be stupid.
Wrong, or at least, not completely correct.
Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow are primary colors for pigment.
Blue, Red, and Green are primary colors for light.
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A few animals that can see ultraviolet.
Did you know that many animals are actually able to see in UV? Here are but a few of them.
interestingengineering.com
A few animals that can see infrared.
Cold-blooded animals such as blood-sucking insects, some snakes, fish and frogs can see infrared light.
sciencing.com
That's my point, Arty!
God cannot know or do the impossible, Arty, because BY DEFINITION IT IS IMPOSSIBLE!
You're literally saying that God can be irrational yet remain rational!
That's A CONTRADICTION! The
law of noncontradiction states that contradictory propositions cannot both be true simultaneously in the same sense.
God is rational. He cannot do the irrational, because doing so would mean He is irrational.
There's a difference between saying "God can do something we cannot" and "because God can do something we cannot, therefore He must be capable of doing irrational things." The former is rational. The latter is, by definition, irrational.
It is, in fact, calling God irrational.
You're trying to say that A = !A. It won't work. The irrational one here is YOU!