For the record, I have no problem with someone using AI to help organize a post. What I object to is posting polished filler without owning or editing the argument.
But there is a very clear and obvious difference between a well-structured post and AI-generated fog that sounds careful while avoiding the actual issue.
I think we're getting closer to identifying the actual point of disagreement.
This reads like AI-generated filler, but yes, the point of disagreement is clear enough.
My assumption is that God's exhaustive foreknowledge and meaningful human agency are compatible, even if I acknowledge that explaining exactly how they fit together is difficult.
That's the very point of contention.
You can't just assume what is in dispute. That's not how discussion works. If exhaustive infallible foreknowledge and meaningful human agency are compatible, then you need to show how, not merely say that they are while admitting it is difficult to explain.
And might I add, the difficulty is not accidental. The difficulty is that the claim is contradictory. Truth is not self-contradictory.
Your assumption appears to be that if a future act is infallibly known, then it is necessarily fixed in a way that eliminates genuine alternatives.
No, that's the argument I'm making, not just an assumption. There's a difference.
If God infallibly knows Adam will sin, then Adam’s sin cannot fail to happen. If Adam can refrain from sinning, then God’s prior knowledge can be false. If God’s prior knowledge cannot be false, then Adam cannot refrain from sinning.
Again, the issue is not causation, but necessity.
JudgeRightly seems to be making a related but slightly different argument: that future free choices do not yet exist as settled realities and therefore cannot be known as settled facts.
At least edit what the machine gives you.
The arguments are two sides of the same coin.
If a future free act is not settled, then it cannot be known as settled. If it is already known as settled, then the creature cannot do otherwise.
Those are different challenges to the classical view of omniscience.
They are two sides of the same problem: either the future free act is not settled, in which case it cannot be known as settled, or it is settled, in which case the person genuinely cannot do otherwise.
What I find interesting is that Christians have historically arrived at very different conclusions on this question. Classical theists, Augustinians, Thomists, Molinists, Calvinists, Arminians, and Open Theists all affirm God's omniscience, yet they explain the relationship between divine knowledge and human freedom differently.
Listing the historical options does not tell us which premise of the fatalism argument you reject. It only tells us that different systems have tried to deal with the problem.
Where I would hesitate is moving directly from "God knows a future act" to "therefore someone other than the creature must have determined it." That seems to assume that certainty and causation are the same thing, which is precisely one of the points under debate.
That's Derf's argument, not mine, though I'm not in disagreement with his point.
My argument is narrower: if a future act is infallibly known, then it cannot be otherwise. You can say God did not cause the choice, but that does not restore the possibility of doing otherwise.
Likewise, I am not convinced that God's knowledge must be limited to what presently exists within time.
Whether you are convinced or not is in fact irrelevant.
"What is God supposed to be knowing?"
God can know possibilities. He can know His own intentions. He can know what He will do. He can know all actual facts.
But a future free choice that has not yet been made is not an actual fact. It is a possibility. To know it as a settled fact before it is made is to make it settled before it is made.
The classical Christian understanding has generally held that God is not merely another observer moving through history alongside us, but transcends time altogether.
Addressed here:
https://kgov.com/time
Timelessness does not automatically solve the problem. If Adam’s sin is timelessly fixed, then Adam still cannot do otherwise. Removing the word “before” does not restore the alternative.
The question remains: could Adam have refrained from sinning?
If yes, then the supposedly fixed fact could have been otherwise.
If no, then Adam did not have a genuine alternative.
So I agree that the real issue is not causation but necessity.
Another AI-sounding phrase.
Are you,
@Douglas Fossett, actually agreeing here, or is the machine just smoothing over the disagreement?
The question is whether God's infallible knowledge makes an act necessary in a way that eliminates meaningful agency, or whether God's knowledge is certain because He perfectly knows what free creatures will choose.
I just demonstrated that it does do just that.
“God perfectly knows what free creatures will choose” is just a restatement of exhaustive foreknowledge. It does not answer the problem.
If God infallibly knows Adam will sin, can Adam refrain from sinning?
If yes, then God’s knowledge is not infallible.
If no, then Adam cannot do otherwise.
That is where I think the discussion actually turns.
More AI filler text.
Answer it directly.
Can Adam do otherwise than what God infallibly knows Adam will do?
If he can, then God’s foreknowledge is not infallible.
If he cannot, then Adam does not have a genuine alternative.