You wouldn't have free will.Andrew D wrote:If the God of the Judeo-Christian tradition exists, the existence of human free will is impossible.oldr_n_wsr wrote:Given a choice (aka free will) ....
However I do...
You wouldn't have free will.Andrew D wrote:If the God of the Judeo-Christian tradition exists, the existence of human free will is impossible.oldr_n_wsr wrote:Given a choice (aka free will) ....
Andrew D wrote:Misconstruing my argument is no valid response to it. As I have pointed out to you before, I do not contend that the mere "ability to observe time as a whole removes the possibility of choice." Such a contention would be relevant only if the Christian tradition(s) considered God to be a mere observer of the universe. Is that your understanding of God?
Not at all there are numerous occasions where God interacts with his creation including the negation of someones free will. The point being that these interactions are the exception rather than the norm. THe fact that he can negate free will does not mean it is always the case. More to the point if there was no free will why have these interactions at all? Why not have everything run without his intervention along the timeline? Do these interventions therefore imply that he is bound by his creation to interact in such was with it? Would that not also negate his free will?Such a contention would be relevant only if the Christian tradition(s) considered God to be a mere observer of the universe. Is that your understanding of God?
You center your theme on 1 notion.Andrew D wrote:Okay, reasoning doesn't matter to you.
Is there anyone out there who actually cares about logical reasoning and is willing to confront the logic which proves that if a God as defined in the Judeo-Christian tradition(s) exists, human free will is impossible? Or will you all just run away?
Sorry Keld, to me that's just the standard cop out used by many religious people when confronted with irrefutable logic:keld feldspar wrote:You center your theme on 1 notion.Andrew D wrote:Okay, reasoning doesn't matter to you.
Is there anyone out there who actually cares about logical reasoning and is willing to confront the logic which proves that if a God as defined in the Judeo-Christian tradition(s) exists, human free will is impossible? Or will you all just run away?
As CP points out very clearly God is everywhere at once.
Now is your statement in logic applicable while God is in the pacific timezone with Gob or here with me in central time or you in pacific.
Faced with that your logic is irrelavent...