Quote from: Optimism on February 26, 2011, 05:04:07 PM
Quote from: Xrow on February 26, 2011, 04:56:02 PM
Quote from: Optimism on February 26, 2011, 04:36:49 PM
Quote from: Xrow on February 26, 2011, 04:28:53 PM
koolwolf2, Opti and Lyric are under the false impression that if a being knows everything, then that being must also control everything. They lack the ability to see around their own hindrances.
He will know your selection before you select it and thus, you have no free will, despite you perceiving otherwise.
No evidence to support this claim, either inductional or deductional. Talk to any logical and intelligent human, they will tell you what I have.
It is a matter of perspective. Sadly, I perceive yours to be an illogical one. Your logical pathway is full of trees and bushes that seemingly have thrown you off the end destination.
It is not a matter of perspective. Truth is absolute, regardless of perspective of it.
You have given no actual reasoning for your assumption of the paradox of omniscience. I suspect no actual reasoning exists for it, though.
"Reason" 1:
"If God knows all, He must also control all."
You must realize the difference between knowing and control. Until you can understand the extremely simple difference, there is no hope that you will realize your fallacy.
"Reason" 2:
"You only think you know that you have free will, when in actuality, your existence is predestined."
The first problem with this "argument" is that there is simply no evidence behind it.
The second problem is the falsity of your first premise - this cripples your second premise and all proceeding it.
The third problem with this "argument" is that, in order to think I have free will, I would be exercising free will! Now, why would an omni-benevolent creator allow me to believe I have free will while He is orchestrating mine and everyone else's thoughts/actions?
The fourth problem is this: Why would God force His creation to believe in something other than himself? And why would he force some people to hate him completely?
Finally - and yes, I have explained this to you at least twice already, yet you still fail to grasp it - there are multiple religions on earth, and most teach mutual exclusivity. If any one of these religions is true, or even if none of them are, people are still exercising free will by believing in religions that contradict the others!
An example:
If Christianity is absolutely true, then your belief in a lack of God is evidence of free will. My God allows you to exercise your free will by believing that He does not exist.
If atheism is absolutely true, then my belief in Christianity is evidence of free will. Your lack of God allows me to exercise my free will by believing that God exists.