Some of us have other things to do. Stop acting as if I've abandon the thread in favor of hiding out because you've made some earth-shattering refutation. I show up when I can.novice said:Johnny?
No comment on why you chose emphasize that it's the measurement of time that is proven relative? I'm quite interested.
If the benefits of the theory of relativity do not allow the ability to interact with future and or past events how on earth could this theory be relevant to open theism?
For starters I'm still not entirely convinced you read my post 1544 thoroughly because you clearly haven't grasped the concepts contained within--or at least you're not presenting any argument against them. The bottom three paragraphs of that post are devoted to explaining why relativity is relevent to the discussion at hand. Open Theism assumes some universal objective "present" that God is stuck in. For this reason, God can only "know the knowable", as some of you put it. He cannot see past certain events in which free will plays an important role in determining the outocme. In order to support this assertion, proponents of OT must accept a universal "present" in which God experiences and we experience. As my post explains, according to special relativity, there is no universal present in which we all experience. Reread my discussion on the "now-lists" in #1544. You can't simply freeze-frame the universe and have everyone agree on positions and locations, because each person is experiencing a different "present reality". Again, read my analogy to the film reel. You are assuming there is a universal frame in which we all exist, but that is not the case. My point is that there is more than one "now" in the universe. There are multiple "nows", and for God to be in each person's present reality He must be at multiple places in time.And the party is all of the sudden over. So sorry!
No. Not possible (at least with our current understanding). But so what? What does this have to do with the "now" situation I described above. You have come in, made a statement, and pretended it has refuted my entire argument. You may be making a valid statement, but that doesn't mean it refutes anything. You haven't adequately explained why it refutes anything I have said. I would much appreciate it if you would take a few paragraphs and explain why what you've said is relevant and how it contradicts anything I've said.Can you theorize a way to use the benefits of the theory of relativity to time travel in a real objective way? In other words, if you had all the benefits of the theory of relativity at your disposal could you accurately predict the winner of the superbowl in the year 2010 and then personally place a bet on that game in Las Vegas this year? (2005)
It is also interesting that you added the condition that you had to "personally place a bet on the game in 2005". This implies that you realize it is very well possible for one to travel 5 years into the future in 5 minutes. Let's look at the interaction of an omnipresent God in this situation.
We assume that God is omnipresent, and that He is a unified entity (that is, any interaction at one point in space immediately affects His entire being). I blast off in my rocket ship towards Alpha Centauri at 99.99% the speed of light. Five minutes pass (of my time) passes and I see who wins the world series in 2010 on Earth, even though my clock still says 2005. I tell God who wins. Back on Earth, five minutes has ticked away and it's still the year 2005.
Does God know or not know who wins the world series in 2010?
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