This is how specifically your mind and logic figure it.
No, Lon. It is not how "specifically" someone's logic sees it.
That's ACTUALLY the logical conclusion.
It doesn't follow by necessity.
Yes, Lon, it does.
Here's why:
If God not only knew, but "actuated" (to use your term) Adam or anyone else to sin, then God is the primary cause of that person sinning, and thus, that person is therefore exempt from any culpability for any sin that he committed by God's actuation.
This in and of itself is not the issue, because if we're all just robots having been programmed to do things, then they have no moral value (as Clete explained earlier).
The problem is when you introduce the idea that God will punish those very same people for the actions that they had ZERO control over. THAT is unjust, and for God to do so makes HIM unjust.
It's like a man intentionally slipping a woman a roofie, and then blaming her for him raping her, or like making a man drink a potion you know will change his personality to make him go crazy and start murdering people under the influence of that potion, and then blaming the man for being a murderer.
It is, BY DEFINITION, unjust!
Not because Clete thinks so. Not because we say so, but because it IS unjust! It does, in fact, follow, BY NECESSITY.
I'll see if I can find another video where he explains this more in-depth, but this should do for now:
I yet believe your and I knowing a certain poster was going to respond exactly as we thought he would had nothing (not at all other than your response) to do with what he chose. Knowing can be shown to not be a factor for freewill. In fact, it is our pattern of consistent choices that give us our unique personality. It isn't really our choices that make relationship, as it is our uniqueness shared 1 Corinthians 12.
Except we both knew that the guy you were talking to was going to reply a specific way. Having even an inkling that you would do something would suggest you have no freewill, but you and I would agree he did, just predictable on par with EDF.
This is called confirmation bias.
Being predicable does not mean that the future is settled.
God knowing what someone is like and predicting their future actions does not mean that the future is completely settled.
My wife knows me as near as any other human can know another. She doesn't 'ask' when getting me something to eat. She knows. Her near EDF on specifics, never erases it as my actual choice. Your logic would almost accuse her of removing my freewill. It isn't true. I plays out as untrue.
The problem is that your wife is a human being who, according to your position, does NOT have exhaustive divine foreknowledge (she's only human), and thus, your wife's level of knowledge about you is irrelevant to this current discussion.
Similarly, God knowing something is not the impetus at all that has to do with my our your choices.
It is if His knowledge is infallible, which you claim it is, do you not?
Because we are delving into an area we know next to nothing about future travel, EDF, Almanac from the future in any practical sense; it is hard to logically assert 'no choice.' It 'seems' so, but it doesn't play out.
All of those things are based on the idea that the future is exhaustively settled. IOW, they only exist within the confines of your beliefs.
They do not exist within ours, or for that matter, what the Bible says.
Let me repeat what I'm always hearing from OV: Saying it doesn't make it so!
Which is why we don't just say it. We support our claims.
Here is one instance where God was not right about something:
So Joshua said to the children of Israel, “Come here, and hear the words of the Lord your God.” And Joshua said, “By this you shall know that the living God is among you, and that He will without fail drive out from before you the Canaanites and the Hittites and the Hivites and the Perizzites and the Girgashites and the Amorites and the Jebusites:
Bible Gateway passage: Joshua 3:9-10 - New King James Version
So Joshua said to the children of Israel, “Come here, and hear the words of the Lord your God.” And Joshua said, “By this you shall know that the living God is among you, and that He will without fail drive out from before you the Canaanites and the Hittites and the Hivites and the Perizzites...
www.biblegateway.com
One generation later:
Then the Angel of the Lord came up from Gilgal to Bochim, and said: “I led you up from Egypt and brought you to the land of which I swore to your fathers; and I said, ‘I will never break My covenant with you. And you shall make no covenant with the inhabitants of this land; you shall tear down their altars.’ But you have not obeyed My voice. Why have you done this? Therefore I also said, ‘I will not drive them out before you; but they shall be thorns in your side, and their gods shall be a snare to you.’ ”
Bible Gateway passage: Judges 2:1-3 - New King James Version
Israel’s Disobedience - Then the Angel of the Lord came up from Gilgal to Bochim, and said: “I led you up from Egypt and brought you to the land of which I swore to your fathers; and I said, ‘I will never break My covenant with you. And you shall make no covenant with the inhabitants of this...
www.biblegateway.com
I literally know of no time, ever, God wasn't right.
And now you do know of at least one.
There are PLENTY more, see https://opentheism.org/verses.
Does any definite foreknowledge eliminate my freewill?
It does if it's infallible.
But foreknowledge itself is not an indication of a settled future.
I don't believe so. It may superficially seem so, but when the rubber meets the road, it does not. It simply looks like it 'might.'
The problem is that you're, perhaps unintentionally, conflating prophecies of the future with God's ability to bring certain things to pass.
The former fail.
The latter is not a function of His knowledge, but a result of HIs capability. He is "omnicompetent." He is fully capable of making stuff happen, not because of His knowledge, but because He is powerful and wise enough to do so, able to manipulate His enemies and direct His allies, like an excellent general in a war!
I argue that 'any' knowledge, even 'if' occasionally wrong would be grounds enough under your proffered truth, to say freewill can not exist to any degree that you or I knew the outcome precisely because that is what is on the table: Foreknowledge.
You seem to think that we believe that either everything is settled or nothing is settled.
That's not our position.
Our position is that some things are settled, not because of knowledge, but because of God's omnicompetence, and everything else is God's best guess, which is far better than any human can make.
My wife knows knows I'll go for vanilla. Every time. Knows knows it. Is my preference then for vanilla invalidated? Not at all, it is the opposite: my choice, is validated, rather. If on a cursory glance this is true and with anywise DF in a limited way (it is, in fact definite like an almanac from the future), then certainly it'd fall upon the premise that EDF negates freewill as a false proposition.
The difference is that you still have the potential to go for another flavor.
Again, this is simply a case of confirmation bias.
You could, on one occasion, choose chocolate instead.
You continuing to choose vanilla is not evidence of a settled future. It is evidence that you are a consistent person when it comes to free choices.
When you intimately know another person such as a spouse, your argument would negate about half of my freewill right out of the gates.
Only if that knowledge was A) about their future and B) infallible.
If it is A but not B, then while your predictions might be correct most of the time about what they will do, it will sometimes be wrong (definition of infallible, definition of "will"). The person the knowledge is about still has a will (which again, is by definition "free")
If it is B but not A, then at best, it's present knowledge, and predictions can be made that will be close to the actual outcome, but not guaranteed to be exact, the person still has a will.
If it is both B and A, then there is no other outcome other than what is known, and the person does not have a will, he is just a robot with preprogrammed responses, an automaton.
Neither A nor B falls outside of the scope of this discussion.
It is not true that foreknowledge eradicates freedom.
It does if that foreknowledge is infallible, by definition.
It is a philosopher's speculation at Standford and they are incorrect.
If the foreknowledge is infallible, then man is not free.
This is why:
So, to keep this post from getting entirely too long, I'll conclude it with the following logical argument, which establishes just what it is about EDF that lands the Arminians in the same moral quagmire that their Calvinist cousins created and that they so vehemently reject, namely that we have no free will.
T = You answer the telephone tomorrow at 9 am
Source
- Yesterday God infallibly believed T. [Supposition of infallible foreknowledge]
- If E occurred in the past, it is now-necessary that E occurred then. [Principle of the Necessity of the Past]
- It is now-necessary that yesterday God believed T. [1, 2]
- Necessarily, if yesterday God believed T, then T. [Definition of “infallibility”]
- If p is now-necessary, and necessarily (p → q), then q is now-necessary. [Transfer of Necessity Principle]
- So it is now-necessary that T. [3,4,5]
- If it is now-necessary that T, then you cannot do otherwise than answer the telephone tomorrow at 9 am. [Definition of “necessary”]
- Therefore, you cannot do otherwise than answer the telephone tomorrow at 9 am. [6, 7]
- If you cannot do otherwise when you do an act, you do not act freely. [Principle of Alternate Possibilities]
- Therefore, when you answer the telephone tomorrow at 9 am, you will not do it freely. [8, 9]
....and continuing on from there....
11. All moral actions are freely chosen actions, [definition of 'moral'].12. Conversely, any action that is not done freely is not an amoral action, [definition of 'amoral'].13. The rewarding or punishment of an amoral action is unjust, [definition of 'just']14. God is just. [presupposition of the Christian faith]15. God rewards and punishes the actions of men. [this statement is based on the presupposition that the bible is true]16. Therefore, the actions of men are moral in nature.17. Therefore, the actions of men are done freely.18. Therefore, God does not have exhaustive, infallible foreknowledge.
It's not just philosophy. It's a rational, logic-based argument, that in order to refute it, would require anyone disputing it to show either that one or more of the premises are incorrect, or to demonstrate that there is an inconsistency in the logic, or to show that the conclusions do not necessarily (logically) follow from those premises.
----
God does.
I think Clete overstated his case with the latter two, but God did not decide that two plus two equals four, as if it's something that can be decided arbitrarily.
But this is misreading my intent: when Open Theists say this, they are meaning interpreting how they read scripture, not how I read it.
Reminder, this is what is being talked about:
Open Theists accept the use of the term "Omniscient" in that we believe that God knows all knowable things. It's just that we have different ideas about what is knowable. Some of us also add an additional caveat in that we acknowledge that God, while capable, is not required to know every knowable fact of existence.
This is not a case of "because we say so."
This is a case of "this is what is consistent, or at least the most consistent with Scripture," and is not something we decided arbitrarily.
It contradicts what we alternatively actually believe is a pedantic passage, teaching that God is all-mighty.
Saying it doesn't make it so, and in fact is quite the opposite.
See the opentheism.org link above.
For consideration on the difference between Open Theism and the rest: There is a difference between actual and implication. We all cast a logical end to another's theology which is the 'why' substance of our resistance to their pov. I try to listen when an Open Theist says "Calvinist" but generally I try to bring the mental swing back into the circle of all Christians because most of the time the implication reaches all of us and even often falls back to Open Theism who, trying to distance, don't get the rock thrown that far away.
Clete mentioned before (probably in the other thread) that Open Theism is based on God being just.
Which it is, but it's not quite the whole story, and not the main premise of Open Theism. Maybe this will put things into perspective:
Open theism is founded on the idea that GOD is the one who is free, not necessarily men, and that because GOD is free, therefore the future is open. If God was and/or is not free, then the future is settled.
Infallible foreknowledge locks God into a settled future.
But because He can think a new thought, write a new song, or even design a new butterfly, God is open, and therefore the future is NOT settled, because God can do something new that was never known before.