makesends
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MY INTENT with this thread is not to argue whether "Determinism" implies 'double-determinism', nor whether it is implied that God's primary use for the reprobate is to condemn them. Please don't go there unless it is necessarily part of and argument to the point that @Josheb and I are working on here.
From Post #597 of the thread, Covenant of Works. https://christcentered.community.forum/threads/covenant-of-works.1320/page-30#post-53719 in which Josheb answers me.
Because of the length, I have cut this OP into two posts.
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makesends said:
I don't think you can show that humans can disregard unknown influences.
Determinism of detail doesn't render God's words meaningless. I find myself tempted to answer you as I would an Arminian: "How can Cain, unregenerated, 'act in complete opposition to everything externally and everything internally bearing on him to commit murder'?" I know you don't think like an Arminian, yet this is at the core of the very thing I find repugnant in the logic of an Arminian. Are you suggesting that God knew absolutely everything, yet ignored the knowledge of some of what will not happen, and cause it to be as though it will, when he created? That doesn't sound coherent, to me. I'm guessing I'm not quite understanding what you are saying.
It is at the heart of Calvinism, specifically, that the unregenerate are UNABLE to choose right, and that, by their internal inclinations. How, then, is it possible for them to be able to choose otherwise?
makesends said:
To say that more accurately, humans may disregard this or that in order to choose what they please, but they cannot shed all influences.
makesends said:
The fact that humans can "disregard any and all known ... influences and asserted themselves volitionally and behaviorally in a causal manner - a way that itself creates new causal relationships" is no indicator of independence from causation. If humanity is controlled "deterministically" at all, then it is so at every minute level.
I didn't say there are not other causes besides God. Yes, their contingencies exist (are real) --of course they exist! But, as I describe here below in italics, "contingency" does not imply 2 or more possibilities, but only that an effect is dependent ("contingent") on its cause. If no cause, no effect.
makesends said:
A note on the word, "contingency", there. It does not imply that it could have gone this way or that way, but simply that if x didn't happen, y wouldn't (or would, as the case may be) happen; or alternately, if x does happen, y will not (or will, as the case may be) happen. The fact we don't know, and consider each 'option' equally possible is no indicator that all 'options' are actually possible.
Again, logic demands that ALL things (to include every meticulous detail) are intentionally caused by first cause, and that nothing else has ever been made by first cause, except what he made. "Possibility" that did not work out, was not possible. It only appeared so to creatures.
From Post #597 of the thread, Covenant of Works. https://christcentered.community.forum/threads/covenant-of-works.1320/page-30#post-53719 in which Josheb answers me.
Because of the length, I have cut this OP into two posts.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
makesends said:
I don't think you can show that humans can disregard unknown influences.
But the potentiality is always one. Not more than one. That WE consider it more than one, when it is not, is irrelevant to choice.Then I encourage you to do more research. I will, however, concede one possibility: that of antithesis. If unknown forces are bearing on a person that would otherwise incline him/her to choose and act toward one given response and s/he choose the exact opposite, then s/he would be choosing/acting in antithesis.
This is always a potentiality in scripture. God tells Cain not to do what he is about to do. We know he is compelled to murder, and God's exhortation is intended to highlight that very problem (his bondage to sin) but God's words would be meaningless were it not possible for Cain to also act in complete opposition to everything externally and everything internally bearing on him to commit murder.
Determinism of detail doesn't render God's words meaningless. I find myself tempted to answer you as I would an Arminian: "How can Cain, unregenerated, 'act in complete opposition to everything externally and everything internally bearing on him to commit murder'?" I know you don't think like an Arminian, yet this is at the core of the very thing I find repugnant in the logic of an Arminian. Are you suggesting that God knew absolutely everything, yet ignored the knowledge of some of what will not happen, and cause it to be as though it will, when he created? That doesn't sound coherent, to me. I'm guessing I'm not quite understanding what you are saying.
It is at the heart of Calvinism, specifically, that the unregenerate are UNABLE to choose right, and that, by their internal inclinations. How, then, is it possible for them to be able to choose otherwise?
Of course. In fact, they cannot 'regard' unknown influences. I was trying to say something along the lines that since they don't recognize unknown influence, it is certainly not by their direct intent, but by contingency, that they act according to it, or that they 'disregard' it.I do not think you can prove humans must regard unknown influences.
makesends said:
To say that more accurately, humans may disregard this or that in order to choose what they please, but they cannot shed all influences.
Are you saying that they can disregard all influences? Are you saying that they can act in complete autonomy?So, they can disregard maybe 10% or on a good day maybe 77% and on a really, really, good day maybe 98.6% but never 100%.
makesends said:
The fact that humans can "disregard any and all known ... influences and asserted themselves volitionally and behaviorally in a causal manner - a way that itself creates new causal relationships" is no indicator of independence from causation. If humanity is controlled "deterministically" at all, then it is so at every minute level.
I rather vehemently, if not violently, disagree. God, from whom cause-and-effect descends and upon whom it depends, not to mention that it is also so with logic and the system we call 'reality', does not suspend any of them in order to bring about what WE can only conjecture, but what he knows intimately. Our language reflects our thinking, and our thinking is stunted, supposing that all options are actually possible, since we do not know which is possible.Incorrect. Creation is filled with unrealized potential and it is so by God's design. Any god can make things work only one way. That's not much of a god. I can make action figures do only and exactly what I make them to do. That does not make me a god. much less a God. This has always been one of the problems with strict determinism; in its effort to assert God's omnipotence and sovereignty it makes Him ordinary and not particularly mighty.
You may be right about the authors of the WCF. I wouldn't know. I do know that their words need not entail the possibility of more than one outcome. And you will have a long way to go to convince me that more than what happens was ever possible to happen.I never said it did. What it does say is that causes other than God AND their contingencies exist. Look up the definition of "contingency." Then re-read WCF 3.1 to better understand what the authors were really saying.
I didn't say there are not other causes besides God. Yes, their contingencies exist (are real) --of course they exist! But, as I describe here below in italics, "contingency" does not imply 2 or more possibilities, but only that an effect is dependent ("contingent") on its cause. If no cause, no effect.
makesends said:
A note on the word, "contingency", there. It does not imply that it could have gone this way or that way, but simply that if x didn't happen, y wouldn't (or would, as the case may be) happen; or alternately, if x does happen, y will not (or will, as the case may be) happen. The fact we don't know, and consider each 'option' equally possible is no indicator that all 'options' are actually possible.
Try to bear in mind that a human dictionary does not establish fact, but OUR meaning --our use of thought. It is WE who think that this may, or that may, happen, because we don't know. But God does. And only the one thing will happen, excluding the possibility that the other could have. And whatsoever happens, does so by God's decree. Yes, I am using the word over which the dictionary attempts authority. I do so because the notion brought up by the usual human conception that humans use the word to describe, is faulty at that one point. So if 'contingency' is the right word, then I have to describe it as I did.Nope
Again, logic demands that ALL things (to include every meticulous detail) are intentionally caused by first cause, and that nothing else has ever been made by first cause, except what he made. "Possibility" that did not work out, was not possible. It only appeared so to creatures.